Tower Tribune, Vol. 4, No. 24, 1973 March 6

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Tower Tribune

Vol. 4, No. 24

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

March 5, 1973

a

CYPRUS-BOUND is the 50-member University

rehearsal with

Tamara Brooks, director. They‘ll sing in seven Summer ‘73 Music Festival concerts at
the St. Barnabas School for the Blind and at ancient amphitheaters.

University Singers, Musicians
In Cyprus Summer Festival

The University Singers and several in-
strumentalists from SUNYA will partici-
pate during a five-week stay in Cyprus in
seven “Summer ’73 Music Festival” con-
certs. Official sponsors of the program are
the American Center, a cultural-infor-
mation service of the American Embassy;
the Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation;
Cyprus Tourist Organization; St. Barna-
bas School for the Blind in Nicosia; and
SUNYA.

Concerts planned include five in the

Senate Faces
Emeritus Bill

With the thorny problem of under-
graduate grading apparently behind it,
University Senate faces a relatively light
agenda at its monthly meeting at 3 this
afternoon in the Campus Center Assem-
bly Room.

The only new business scheduled is a
bill from the Council on Promotions and
Continuing Appointments dealing with
academic rank emeritus. The Council was
requested by Senate to review the
“Guidelines for Granting Emeritus
Status.”

The bill would establish the follow-
ing guidelines:

1. Members of the faculty who retire
because of age or who are retired because
of incapacity are eligible.

2. Requests for consideration may be
initiated by the candidate or his depart-
ment. Recommendations will be pro-
cessed through the same channels as
recommendations for promotions.

3. Recommendations will be based
on the candidates accumulated contribu-
tions to SUNYA. In addition to distinc-
tion of performance, length of service al-
so is defined as a criterion.

outdoor amphitheater of St. Barnabas
School and one each in the restored
Greco-Roman amphitheaters at Salamas
and Curium. Involved will be the Univer-
sity Singers and approximately 20 Ameri-
can guest instrumentalists who will per-
form in joint concert with the 15-member
string orchestra of the CBC, 30-40 Cyp-
riot chorus members, and five Cypriot
soloists. The program will be under the
direction of Tamara Brooks, director of
the University Singers, and two members
of the CBC Orchestra.

The three-and-a-half week period
leading up to the festival concerts, set for
July 27-31, will be used in workshop ac-
tivities involving joint rehearsals of the
Cypriot and American artists, rehearsals
of American works, and informal perfor-
mances in various other towns of Cyprus
by the American chorus and chamber
musicians. St. Barnabas School will be the
Americans’ home-away-from-home and a
number of sight-seeing outings is being
planned for the program participants.

Women’s Studies Offers
Second Field Courses

Seven courses will be offered in the
fall in the area of Women’s Studies, now a
registered interdepartmental second field
at SUNYA. Women’s Studies employs an
“untraditional” focus (i.e., sex differenti-
ation) and draws on disciplines in the hu-
manities, social sciences, and the profes-
sions.

The courses are:

Women in Modern Literature. (Eng
313), two sections, three credits; Women
in European History (His 156), one sec-
tion, three credits; History of Women in
the Americas (His 293), one section,
three credits; and Urban Puerto Rican
Family (PRS 329), one section, three
credits.

Also, Processes of Socialization (Soc
460), one section, three credits; Crucial
Health Problems (CHE 350), two sec-
tions, two credits; and Family Health
Problems (CHE 353), two sections, two
credits.

Faculty and advisers will be receiving
further information regarding the Second
Field in Women’s Studies through the
Office of Undergraduate Studies in time
for advisement and pre-registration.
Women’s Studies courses will be clearly
marked in the Fall Schedule of Classes.
Further information may be obtained
from the coordinator of the Women’s
Studies Committee, June E. Hahner of
the History Department. Ms. Hahner is in
Social Science 357, telephone 7-8687.
According to those concerned with the
new field, Women’s Studies would be pro-
fessionally valuable to persons, both men
and women, planning careers in law, gov-
ernment, journalism, social work, librari-

Lecture On Blacks

An illustrated lecture on “Blacks in
Classical Antiquity” will be given 7:30
Wednesday evening in Lecture Center 4
by Frank M. Snowden, Jr., of Howard
University, Washington, D.C. The lecture
is co-sponsored by the SUNYA Depart-
ment of Classics and Department of
Afro-American Studies. The public is
invited to attend and there is no admis-
sion charge.

anship, or education in areas in which
they would be involved with women’s
problems or research on women.

Additionally, spokeswomen point
out, Women’s Studies will provide women
with “a view of the breadth of women’s
achievements which might encourage
them to develop in any number of crea-
tive and professional ways.”

FSA Postpones
Board Increase

No action was taken by the FSA
Board of Directors to pass the proposed
four percent increase in board contracts
for 1973-74. Instead, the group post-
poned its decision pending receipt of ad-
ditional information to be considered at a
special meeting to be held within two
weeks of the Feb. 23rd meeting. The
basic proposal being considered is a four
percent across the board increase. The
figure is based on a two year rise in food
costs and other direct expenses since the
last board increase, as well as encompas-
sing an additional two days of feeding.

Approval was given to the offer to
buy the Waverly Place property by the
newly incorporated consortium of Stu-
dent Association, and the three upper
classes. The property will be used under
the direction of the Student Activities
staff. Purchase options require sale to the
Alumni Association or resale to FSA
before it is placed on the open market.
FSA’s real estate committee was reacti-
vated to negotiate the sale of the last
piece of FSA property at 70 Fuller Road.

Action was postponed on a proposal
to alter the check cashing service until a
detailed report can be studied.

In other business, the Board dis-
cussed the operating status of FSA. In
most areas January balances were ahead
of last year’s figures and it appears that
all areas except the Bookstore will show
positive balances at the year’s end. Losses
there are expected to be less than last
year.

Cross-Registration To Begin In Fall

Beginning with the fall term, SUNYA
and 10 other area institutions will partici-
pate in a new program of cross-registra-
tion opportunity for undergraduate stu-
dents. The program will be conducted for
a three-year trial period. Other schools in
the program are Albany College of Phar-
macy, Fulton-Montgomery Community
College, Hudson Valley Community Col-
lege, Maria College, Rensselaer Polytech-
nic Institute, Russell Sage College, Siena
College, Skidmore College, College of St.
Rose, and Union College.

Vice president for academic affairs
Phillip Sirotkin commented, “We look
forward to this new venture as part of a

concern to enhance the educational op-
portunities available to undergraduate
students (here).”

SUNYA students wishing to avail
themselves of the new opportunity will
register here for courses at other schools
and will pay tuition and fees at SUNYA.
The program is open only to full-time
matriculated students and each student
must obtain approval from the university
for courses to be taken on other cam-
puses.

It is expected that students will only
register for courses on other campuses
that are not available here. All students

must abide by the academic rules and
regulations applicable at the host school,
as well as those of SUNYA. In addition,
during a cross-registration semester,
SUNYA students must take at least half
of their academic load here.

Procedures and policies for students
wishing to participate in the cross-regis-
tration program will be coordinated by
Bruce C. Gray, associate dean, University
, College. He has prepared information for
academic advisers and for University Col-
lege associates in each academic unit. Stu-
dents interested in including cross-regis-
tration courses in their fall program
should consult their academic advisers.
—.

A FAMILIAR SCENE over the next several weeks will be one similar to the photo

above, showing David Simon ‘76 and University College adviser Pat Rooney, as aca-
demic advisement begins in University College and the School of Business.

Czapski, Associates Studying
New Waste Heat Cooling Plan

Ulrich H. Czapski and his graduate
students here have been investigating new
cooling techniques which in the future
could be utilized by electrical power
plants in the State of New York. The re-
search program is being supported by the
New York State Science and Technology
Foundation through a grant of $24,714
made to SUNYA on September 1, 1972.
It is the outgrowth of research started in
1969-70 with the support of N.Y.S.S.T.F.
and that research subsequently attracted
federal funds.

Students Aid
Fund Effort

Students are playing an important
role in the 1973 Alumni Annual Fund
effort, the goal of which is an Alumni
House-Conference Center on campus. The
Student Association has loaned the Alum-
ni Association $5,000 to begin the drive
and individual students have been travel-
ling to talk with alumni. They also will be
helping in the 1973 Annual Fund phono-
thon.

Some students have been working
since last summer in the university’s
“Operation Outreach,” an effort to re-
establish contact with alumni. The visits
throughout the state have featured a slide
presentation highlighting the transition of
Albany State from a teachers college to a
university center.

In addition to the presentation, stu-
dents and university staff have talked
informally with alumni and answered
questions. Alumni response to the oppor-
tunities to’ gain firsthand information has
been described as “enthusiastic.”

The Student Association loan has
been used to cover initial expenses in
developing the annual fund program and
in preparing materials. “In addition to its
practical side,” observed David Jenks ’64,
director of alumni affairs, “it represents
the commitment of the Student Associa-
tion to the alumni’s effort to help
SUNYA.

“Michael Lampert ’73, current presi-
dent of Student Association, believes the
alumni are an important part of the uni-
versity community and as fellow commu-
nity members they should work together
for a better university. As alumni,” he
added, “we should be encouraged and
challenged by the students’ sense of
loyalty. Their interest and commitment
make our future all the more hopeful.”

The experimental test program is pri-
marily designed to assess potential envi-
ronmental effects and performance of
efficiencies of the use of spray ponds or
canals in the cooling waste heat generated
by electric power plants. Dr. Czapski and
his associates plan, through the assess-
ment, to aid state agencies and electrical
power industry on their decision-making
process as to which method of cooling is
most suitable in New York State.

The research program involves a test
scale spray at Lake George and the opera-
tion of various spray nozzles under a
broad range of conditions of temperature,
wind velocity and direction, and relative
humidity. Among the environmental
effects that will be closely observed and
evaluated are local icing conditions, visi-
bility in the vicinity of the plume, extent
of drift, and incidence of plume related
fogging.

The power plant cooling technique
currently utilized throughout the State is
once-through cooling whereby cooling
water is drawn from and returned to a
natural water-course through intake and
discharge facilities specially designed to
minimize disturbance of the environment.

In the spray cooling pond concept,
however, the heated water from power
plants is sprayed into the air where the
heat is dissipated through evaporation of
a portion of the water and the bulk of the
water is recollected in the spray pond.
The method can be utilized either to pre-
cool cooling water prior to its discharge
into lakes and rivers or in a closed system
with the collected cooling water being re-
cycled back to the plant.

Dr. Czapski, who is associate profes-
sor in the department of atmospheric sci-
ence, is the principal investigator for the
project. Richard Nelson, John Martin and
Michael Guski, all of the department, are
assisting Dr. Czapski with the project.

Bilingual Project Seeking
Continued U.S. Support

The School of Education is asking
Uncle Sam to continue funding an unu-
sual program which prepares people to
teach in both Spanish and English.

Known as the Bilingual Education
Project, the effort has been underway for
two years. Approval is now being sought
for its third year to run from 1973 to
1974,

SUNYA’s Richard L. Light, assistant
professor, English as a second language,
said the project is aimed at Spanish-
speaking children whose command of
English is so meager they cannot benefit
from regular schooling.

“The bilingual project,” he ex-
plained, “provides educators with know-
ledge and skills necessary to work more
effectively with Spanish-speaking stu-
dents and to train other adults.”

Dr. Light said the need is great and
pointed out that some 300,000 children
in New York State speak a non-English
mother tongue. Although Chinese,
Italian, and Portuguese are used, the ma-
jor language involved is Spanish.

“Suppose a local youngster from Al-
bany or Schenectady moved to Russia
with his parents and enrolled in school.
Imagine his bewilderment and frustration
of trying to learn math or history or sci-
ence when all the instruction is in Rus-
sian. That’s what it’s like for a number of
kids here in New York State.”

Dr. Light said the program is using
several approaches. The one which has re-
ceived most attention is at the East Main
Street School in Amsterdam where
special attention is given to Spanish-
speaking children. They are the sons and
daughters of Latin Americans, primarily
Puerto Rican, who moved to Amsterdam
to live and work.

“The 50 or so youngsters spend two
hours a week in classes where everything
is taught in Spanish,” he explained. “All
other classes are in English.”

In addition to the two professional
teachers, State University graduate stu-
dents work at the Amsterdam center ob-
serving, helping, and trying out instruc-
tional materials.

The SUNYA program also includes
summer institutes in Albany where ex-
perienced and prospective bilingual
teachers concentrate for a month of
study focussing on methods and materials
for bilingual education.

The major phase is a year-long gradu-

ate program. During the current semester,
ten bilingual specialists are working with
teaching methods and materials, and are
studying such topics as Puerto Rican cul-
ture, linguistics and educational adminis-
tration. During the spring term, they will
focus attention on advanced teaching
techniques, the urban Puerto Rican
family, and independent study.

Medardo Gutierrez, a Spanish-English
language specialist, coordinates the pro-
gram at SUNYA. Dr. Light pointed out
that Professor Gutierrez’s instruction is in
Spanish, an approach he termed “both a
break with tradition and a reinforcement
of the students’ expertise in Spanish.”

Administered by the SUNYA School
of Education and financed under the
Education Professions Development Act,
the area program is the only upstate of-
fering of its kind. Similar programs are
being carried on at New York University
and City University of New York.

In addition to visiting lecturers and
State University staff people, the area
project is helped by an advisory group.
Among its 15 members are Carlos Perez
of the State Education Department; Con-
gressman Herman Badillo; Thomas Caton,
Amsterdam’s superintendent of schools;
and Luis Fuentes, a local superintendent
of schools in New York City.

Recycling Heads
Group’s Agenda

The Environmental Decisions Com-
mission, co-chaired by Amy Borgman and
Jon Scott, is working on a number of
problems this semester, devoting a major
effort to the encouragement of recycling.

At a recent meeting the basis for the
semester’s work, directed by subcommit-
tees, was described as campus recycling
including paper, bottles, cans, and rela-
tion to three-county plans; poster pollu-
tion; salt on campus roads; composting;
non-leaded gasoline follow-up; power
plant updating report; sewage disposal;
campus esthetics; study of campus pond;
pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers; bi-
cycle racks; car pools; Indian Quad park-
ing lot and associated erosion.

There have been suggestions that a
“campus environmentalist” be hired to
keep an eye on campus environmental
problems and that a member of the Fac-
ulty Wives group become a permanent
member of the commission.

Robert W. Frederick, Sr.

Robert W. Frederick, Sr., professor
emeritus, died Feb. 22 while on a
freighter cruise in the Caribbean. He had
been on the faculty here from 1930 until
his retirement in 1966.

A professor of education, Dr. Fred-
erick served for nearly a decade as di-
rector of teacher training and principal of
The Milne School. He was the author or

New Accident Plan Available

The Travelers accident plan for faculty and professional staff, in cooperation with
SUNY, is being made available to all professional staff of SUNYA. During the month
of March the following pro-rata rates will apply:

Principal Sum Annual Premium Pro-Rata Premium
$ 25,000 $ 21.25 $ 15.95
50,000 42.50 31.90
75,000 63.75 47.80
100,000 85.00 63.75

Coverage will be effective upon receipt of a signed application accompanied by a
check for the applicable pro-rata premium. For application forms and brochures out-
lining the plan, contact Ms. Stephanie Stroyen, personnel office, AD 345, phone

71-3923.

co-author of nine books including “How
To Study Handbook,” “A Guide to Col-
lege Study,” and “Citizenship Education
Through Social Studies.”

Professor Frederick held degrees
from Denison and Yale universities and
New York University where he received
his doctorate. Before coming to Albany
he had taught at William Jewell College.

Surviving are his wife, the former
Eleanor Machlin; three sons, Robert F.
Jr., president of Corning Community Col-
lege, Jack, professor of history at Fulton-
Montgomery Community College, and
Peter, associate professor of history,
Wabash College; a sister; and six grand-
children. A memorial service was held
Wednesday at the Albany Unitarian
Church.

It will come as no surprise to those
of the university community who remem-
ber Dr. Frederick that, while on his last
cruise, he was teaching informal philoso-
phy courses to his shipmates.
CAMPUS CLIPBOARD

ALL UNIVERSITY EVENTS .

MONDAY (5) MIDDLE EARTH TRAINING SESSIONS - 7 pm - CC 315.
WOMEN'S LIBERATION FRONT FILM - 7:30 pm - LC 1.
SIMS CHECKING DAYS - 7:30 pm - HU 290.

TUESDAY (6) NEWMAN ASSOCIATION PRAYER SERVICE - 8:30 am - CC 370.

NEWMAN ASSOCIATION MASS - 9:10 am - CC 370.

HEROIN INFORMATION PRESENTATION - 10 am - CC Assembly Hall.

DRUGS AND THE LAW FORUM WITH D. A., Public Defender, N.Y.S. Police, and SUNYA Police - 1:30 pm -
CC Assembly Hall.

CHANGING TRENDS IN YOUTHFUL DRUG PROGRAMMING - 7:30 pm - LC 1.

SIMS CHECKING DAYS - 7:30 pm - HU 290.

LECTURE ON "Radio Wave Characteristics and Their Prediction" - Amateur Radio Club - 8 pm - Livingston
Tower Penthouse.

WEDNESDAY (7) HOTLINES AND PARAPROFESSIONAL COUNSELING DISCUSSION - 10 am - CC Assembly Hall.

SS BLOODMOBILE - 10 am - CC Ballroom.

NEWMAN ASSOCIATION MASS - 11:10 am - CC 315.

DRUG REHABILITATION AND ITS EFFECTIVENESS FORUM - 1:30 pm - CC Assembly Hall.

BIBLE STUDY ON THE GOSPEL OF LUKE - 3:15 pm - Chapel House.

HEROIN INFORMATION PRESENTATION - 7:30 pm - CC Assembly Hall.

SUNYA FENCING SOCIETY - 7:30 pm - Gym.

NEWMAN ASSOCIATION MASS - 8 pm - LC 22,

THURSDAY (8) PRINT SALE - Roten Galleries - 1] am - CC Main Lounge.
ASSOCIATION MASS - 11:10 am - CC 370.
WOMEN'S STUDIES AT SUNYA - Open Forum - 11:15 am - HU 354,
RUSSIAN CLUB FILM - 7:30 pm - CC Assembly Hall.

FRIDAY (9) NEWMAN ASSOCIATION PRAYER SERVICE - 8:30 am - CC 370.
NEWMAN ASSOCIATION MASS - 9:10 am - CC 370.
PRINT SALE - Roten Galleries - 10 am - CC Main Lounge.

SATURDAY (10) | SUNYA FENCING SOCIETY - 10 am - Gym.
STUDENT ASSOCIATION BUDGET HEARING - 10 am - CC 370.

MEETINGS

MONDAY (5) L.F.C. - 6 pm ="CC 333. FINANCE COMM/CENTRAL COUNCIL - 7:30pm - CC 373.
SPECIAL EVENTS BOARD - 7 pm - CC Patroon Lounge. P.Y.E, - 7:30 pm - FA 126,
KARATE CLUB - 7:30 pm - Gym-Dance Studio-3rd Floor. U.S.J.C. - 7:30 pm - HU 18.
CLASS OF '76 - 7:30 pm - CC 375. WSUA - 8:30 pm - CC 370.

TUESDAY (6) I.S.C. - 6 pm - CC 370. SMOKE WATCHERS - 7:30 pm - LC 14,
SOCIETY OF PHYSICS STUDENTS - 7:30 pm - Ph 129. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORGANIZATION - 8:15 pm - HU 18.

WEDNESDAY (7) GEOGRAPHY CLUB - 3:30 pm - SS 134. J.S.C. EDUCATIONAL SERIES - 7:30 pm - CC 315.
AMIA COUNCIL - 5:30 pm - CC 367. CHESS CLUB - 7:30 pm - CC 373.
SIMS - 6:30 pm - BA 214, 215, 216. OUTING CLUB - 7:30 pm - LC 2.
MIDDLE EARTH - 7 pm - LC 24, KARATE CLUB - 8 pm - Gym-Dance Studio-3rd Floor.
SAILING CLUB - 7 pm - CC 370. SKI CLUB - 8 pm - LC 5.
SMOKE WATCHERS - 7:30 pm - LC 14. SCUBA CLUB - 8:30 pm - HU 18.
UNIVERSITY CONCERT BOARD - 7:30 pm - CC 375.

THURSDAY (8) CENTRAL COUNCIL - 7:30 pm - CC 375. SUNYA GAY ALLIANCE - 8 pm - CC 315.

FRIDAY (9) CENTRAL COUNCIL P.S.P. - 2 pm - CC 370.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
APPLICATIONS FOR CAMPUS CENTER STUDENT ASSISTANTS for the fall are available in CC 137.

CHECK CASHING WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, MARCH 10 THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1973. IT WILL RE-OPEN MONDAY,
MARCH 19 at 9 am.

Campus Clipboard is prepared by the Student Activities Office. Items to be included
should be submitted in writing to CC 137 by the Tuesday preceding publication date.

For further information about items listed in the Clipboard, call 7-6923.

SA Opinion Poll Results
In Interpretation Maze

If the complicated, 15-item opinion
poll on the Student Association budget
was confusing to voters, then the results
of the survey certainly pose a difficult
problem of interpretation to Central
Council. The poll, designed to measure
undergraduate priorities in terms of

Women Slate
Open Meeting

The Albany Chapter of the Caucus
on Women’s Rights at SUNY will hold an
open meeting to discuss the future of
Women’s Studies at SUNYA on Thursday
in Humanities 354 from 11:15 a.m. to
12:45 p.m.

Women’s Studies now is a registered
second field at SUNYA (see story on page
one) and interest has been expressed in
developing an undergraduate major in
Women’s Studies. The Caucus on
Women’s Rights at SUNY hopes that
interested students and faculty will
attend the Thursday meeting and ex-
change views on the subject.

The discussion also will serve as a
follow-up to the lecture last week by
Catharine Stimpson on “The Necessity of
Women’s Studies.”

Library Displays

British Drama

An exhibit on the theme of British
drama, 1850-1950, is on display in the
Red Carpet Lounge on the second floor
of the library. The exhibit will continue
through March 20.

Featured are playwrights George Ber-
nard Shaw, Oscar Wilde, Sir James Barrie,
John Millington Synge, Sean O’Casey,
Christopher Fry, Sir Arthur Wing Pinero,
T.S. Eliot, William Butler Yeats, John
Galsworthy, and Sir Noel Coward. The
topic was selected to coordinate with
Shaw’s Arms and the Man, a recent State
University Theatre production on
campus.

Brazilian Films

Among special entertainment pro-
grams on campus this week are a mini-
festival of Brazilian films and a theatre
course project play.

The Center for Inter-American
Studies will bring Brazil’s Cinema Novo,
predominantly a youthful movement,
here tomorrow, Wednesday, and Thurs-
day. There will be no admission charge
for the films which are in Portuguese with
English subtitles. June E. Hahner, history,
will lead a discussion after each presenta-
tion.

The showings will be Tuesday, 2 p.m.
and 7:30 p.m., LC 2, “The Gods and The
Dead”; Wed., 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m., LC 3,
“Macunaima”; and Thurs., 2 p.m. and
7:30 p.m., LC 2, “Plantation Boy.”

“Devil and Daniel Webster” will be
presented in the Recital Hall Saturday at
8 p.m. There will be no admission fees

Tower Tribune

Published weekly when classes are in ses-
sion by the Community Relations Office
as a service to the university community;
carries news of campus-wide interest for
and about students, faculty, and staff.
Submit items in writing 10 days in ad-
vance to AD 235. Name and address
must be included, All material is subject
to editing. For further information call
17-4901. The “Tower Tribune” is printed
on recycled paper stock.

where SA money should be spent, has
yielded an abundance of data, but there
are numerous ways in which the informa-
tion may be construed.

One clearcut conclusion which may
be drawn from the survey is that most of
the 17-18% of the student body who
voted favor a significant increase in ex-
penditures for concerts. Films, perfor-
ming arts, speakers, newspaper and radio,
and fine arts were listed as other popular
activities, in that order of priority.

The basic problem with the results is
that they provide no reliable information
which could guide Central Council in
determining the amount of money to be
appropriated for each group next year.
The opinion poll simply has produced an
accurate priority schedule. The specific
amount of increase or decrease in funds is
subject to a wide range of interpretations.

In another opinion poll which was
held concurrently with the budget study,
voters approved a one-time expenditure
of $14,000 that would enable WSUA Ra-
dio to broadcast in FM stereo. A large
majority of students opposed SA dona-
tions to political groups, but supported
Community Service contributions.

Now that student input pertaining to
SA spending has been obtained, Central
Council is turning its attention to an
opinion poll on housing, as required by a
bill passed at the Feb. 22 session. Among
issues surveyed in a poll of dormitory
residents would be the prohibiton from
dorm rooms of such items as cooking ap-
pliances and lounge furniture, Residence
Review Board, and unannounced
searches.

MORE THAN $12,000 was raised by Telethon ‘73 for the bene!

of the Wildwood

School. Among the campus groups performing during the 24-hour, non-stop show
from the Campus Center Ballroom was the Star Spangled Washboard Band, pictured
above. Some 5,500 persons attended the sixth annual Telethon and another 556
‘phoned in pledges. Three area physicians donated a significant amount of free medical
service. The address for mailing in pledges is Telethon ‘73, Box 673-EE, SUNYA,

Albany, New York 12222.

"Round the Campus

Students interested in living in Sayles International House on the downtown campus
are advised that special meetings have been planned for tomorrow at 10 p.m. in Sayles
and for Thursday at 7 p.m. in the CC Patroon Lounge. Attendance at one of the
meetings is mandatory. Sayles is a special interest residence hall with total occupancy
divided between U.S. students and international students. Emphasis is on programming
and interaction . . . Registration is now open for the Spring 1973 non-credit courses of
the College of General Studies. A brochure with courses descriptions and information
on fees and registration will be sent on request. Call 472-8493 ... The Asian Studies
Committee and the College of Arts and Sciences will sponsor a SUNY Asian Studies
Faculty Council workshop and annual meeting Friday and Saturday in the Campus
Center . . . Four professors of the Art Department have had shows open recently out-
side the Capital District. The Richard Stankiewicz show, “Five Sculptures,” was at the
Zabriskie Gallery in New York and Thom O’Connor’s “Witches of Salem” was shown

Great Dane Sports

The Great Danes finished their regu-
lar basketball season last Wednesday with
an 83-81 victory over Williams, then be-
gan a telephone vigil awaiting word from
the ECAC on a probable invitation to its
first Upstate New York Tournament. The
four-team event will be held this Friday
and Saturday and Albany was in conten-
tion as host for the tourney. Announce-
ment was expected over the weekend
from the ECAC.

By beating Williams for the first time
in three years, the Danes finished their
schedule with five straight victories and a
16-7 record. They were eliminated from
NCAA tournament consideration when
Potsdam was selected for a first round
East Regional game. Only two teams
from the SUNY Conference can be
chosen and Brockport already had a spot
by virtue of having won the conference
championship.

In addition to Albany, teams in the
running for the ECAC tourney included
LeMoyne, Rochester, St. John Fisher, St.

Positions Available

Information about the campus job
openings listed below is available from
the Personnel Office, 7-3923.

C-224  Stenographer (2), payroll
office, biology

C-225 Clerk, library

C-226 Steam fireman, physical plant

C-227 Cleaner, part-time, physical
plant

C-228 Typist, library

C-229 Motor vehicle operator, physical
plant

C-230 Lab aide, physics

P-73109 Associate dean, Division of Sci-
ence and Mathematics

Lawrence, Siena, and Union. The Danes’
record was the best of the seven. Hart-
wick, Brockport, RPI, and C.W. Post, plus
one team to be named, will join Potsdam
in the NCAA event.

The wrestling team finished its
season at 8-3 with a 40-11 win at RPI.
Larry Mims, 15-3 at 142 pounds, and
Rudy Vido, 17-3-1 at heavyweight, went
to Brookings, S.D., over the weekend for
the NCAA College Division Champion-
ships.

The swimming team, 4-10, was at
Geneseo for the SUNYAC Champion-
ships.

Drug Seminar

The Drug Education Seminars will
begin tomorrow morning at 10 in the
Assembly Hall with a heroin information
workshop. At 1:30 p.m., at the same lo-
cation, there will be a discussion of drugs
and the law. In the evening, at 7:30, the
subject will be changing trends in youth-
ful drug programming.

On Wednesday the seminars will con-
tinue, beginning at 10 a.m., with informa-
tion about crisis switchboards and para-
professional counseling. At 1:30 p.m. the
subject will be drug rehabilitation and its
effectiveness. In the evening at 7:30 the
heroin information workshop will be
repeated. For more details, call 457-7588.

Telephone Change

The telephone number for Mrs.
Martha W. Miller, editor of academic
publications, is listed incorrectly in the
University Directory. Mrs. Miller may be
reached on 7-4901, not 7-4630.

at the Hartley Gallery, also in New York.
Pottery by Frances Simches and jewelry
by Kenneth Welch are included in the
show, “Artist-Craftsmen of Central New
York” at the Munson-Williams-Proctor
Museum in Utica... Meanwhile, back at
the City and County Savings Bank in
Albany, there are 16 works of six
SUNYA faculty on display through Mar.
28 as part of the Albany Institute of His-
tory and Art’s sales-rental program.
Artists represented are Edward Cowley,
William Wilson, Dennis Byng, Shirley Pen-
man, Jane Kirsted, and Robert Cartmell
...SUNYA will be represented this
week on the program of the 28th Nation-
al Conference on Higher Education in
Chicago by the Prototype Teaching Unit
of the Educational Communication Cen-
ter... The University Singers are engaged
in raising funds for the group’s sched-
uled concert trip to Cyprus in the sum-
mer. As part of the effort, a benefit per-
formance, “Nightclub on a Sunday After-
noon,” was presented by the students
yesterday in the PAC Recital Hall... A
series of PYE-sponsored films will begin
tomorrow night at 8 in the Lecture Cen-
ter. Two of the films are from the United
National Award winning series, “Man
Builds, Man Destroys,” =

Campus Exchange

FOR RENT: 2-bedroom apartment to
sublet, furnished, on bus route, available
March 25 to June 1. Call 7-8615 or
489-4275 after 5:30 p.m.

FOR SALE: 1 pair men’s tubular ice
skates, size 9, good condition. Call
7-7686 or 456-8103.

WANTED: Home for 3-year-old AKC bas-
set hound, male, affectionate and excel-
lent with children; free to good family
with plenty of room. Call 7-4836.

Metadata

Containers:
Box 3, Item 125
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Date Uploaded:
February 24, 2022

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