Tower Tribune, Vol. 4, No. 6, 1972 October 2

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Tower Tribune

October 2, 1972

Vol. 4, No. 6

PAVING OF COLONIAL and Indian quad parking lots was one of the recommen-

dations made to the University Council by vote of the Student Association Central
Council. The accompanying rationale states that “both lots turn into veritable
quagmires after any heavy rain and especially in the spring,” and recommends that
paving be done before the snow falls this year.

Lack of Leadership Hampers

Representation

No new business is listed on the
agenda for the second Senate meeting of
the semester at 3 o'clock this afternoon
in the Assembly Room of the Campus
Center.

The status of the Graduate Student
Association (GSA) and the general issue
of graduate student representation on the
Senate and its councils was discussed at
its last meeting by the Executive Commit-
tee. In its report to the Senate, the com-
mittee notes that at present GSA has “no
visible leadership.”

If sufficient interest in the associ-
ation is not forthcoming, the committee
notes that it may be necessary to explore
in more detail the future of GSA and seek

NTP’s Sought
For Committees

The Committee on Nominations and
Elections of the Faculty is conducting
nominations and elections for the Cam-
pus Promotion Review Panel and Com-
mittee on Professional Evaluation
providing a procedure by which non-
teaching professional employees may
elect representatives to the committees as
required by the agreement between State
University of New York and the Senate
Professional Association.

Proposed for the review panel are
Donald Bunis, Robert Conway, Robert
Fairbanks, Thomas Flemming, Marjorie
Frame, William King, Hugh MacGregor,
Mary Ruhl, Joel True, Grant Van Patten,
Frederick Volkwein, Gary Westervelt,
Keith Whittinham, and Howard Woodruff.

Proposed for the evaluation commit-
tee are Alice Corbin, Alfred Dascher, John
Elliott, Martin Herlands, Carolyn Holmes,
Henry Kirchner, Harry Kolker, Judy Mil-
ler, and Sue Shafarzek.

Others may be nominated by non-
teaching professionals via petitions with 10
signatures and assurances of willingness to
serve. The closing date for getting them to
Katherine Heinig is Oct. 9.

of Graduates

alternate methods of providing Senate
and council representation. One such
method, previously suggested by Dean of
Graduate Studies Louis R. Salkever,
would be to delegate the Senatorial se-
lection process to the various schools and
colleges and draw names for council ap-
pointments from a list of interested
graduate students,

A general meeting for all graduate
students was scheduled last Thursday, the
outcome of, and response to which, will
be reported to the Senate today. Future,
alternate methods in graduate repre-
sentation may be determined by that re-
port.

The Executive Committee also dis-
cussed the problem of grievances against
alleged violations involving by-laws of in-
dividual SUNY units. PERB has ruled
that such violations are not grievable un-
der terms of the current SPA contract be-
cause of recent rulings by the Board of
Trustees. It was felt that other means
may need to be developed to deal with
such problems locally and the Executive
Committee resolved to “remain alert to
such situations as they may arise and take
whatever actions are necessary.”

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

d Fifty Respond to Council

On New Parking Regulations

More than 50 letters concerning the
proposed new parking regulations were to
be reviewed Friday by the University
Council. The letters of suggestion and
comment had been received by Vice
President for Management and Planning
John W. Hartley over the past few weeks,
following a request by the council for
university reaction.

At its Sept. 8 meeting, the council
had delayed implementation of the new
rules until it had an opportunity to re-
view the responses. Ultimately, the Board
of Trustees must approve the regulations,
but it is expected to ratify the council’s
recommendations.

Mr. Hartley expressed satisfaction
with the “fairly active response” by stu-
dents, faculty, and staff. “The response
was greater than I had anticipated,” he
said last week prior to the council
meeting. “Most of the letters were from
individuals, although some were signed by
more than one person, Many were sup-
portive of the proposed new rules, with
the admonition that they be strictly en-
forced, which is our intention.”

Letters from students, Mr. Hartley
said, pretty much agreed with the official
Student Association position as expressed
in a bill unanimously passed by Central
Council. That bill made five suggested
changes in the proposed regulations: Re-
duce fines from $5 to $3; don’t dis-
criminate between commuting students
and faculty in assigning space in Dutch
and State quad lots; pave Colonial and

Indian quad lots; assign spaces in lots 3
and 4 (the administration and medical
lots) on a lottery basis (currently, the vice
presidents determine who shall park in
the administration lot and medical per-
mits are issued by the SUNYA Police
upon application and doctor’s statement);
and consult all segments of the university
before making future changes in the regu-

lations.
Several faculty members also sug-

gested a lottery system for allocating the
approximately 65 spaces in the gated lot
in front of the Administration Building.
In addition to the $5 registration fee,
persons granted space in a gated lot are
charged $15 a semester.

Recommendations were received for
allowing parking on gravel areas nights
and weekends. Parking now is prohibited
on those areas at all times.

Concerts Slated

Two concerts are among the up-
coming programs at the Performing Arts
Center.

Frederic Rzewski, pianist, is listed
for Free Music Store’s Friday evening
concert beginning at 8:30 in the Recital
Hall.

“A Medieval Pastiche, or, The Dark
Ages Illuminated” will be presented by
The Group for Early Music Sunday at 3:30
p.m. in the PAC’s main lobby. A Gregorian
chant and vocal and instrumental works by
Landini, Machant, and Jacopo Da Bologna
will be featured.

Students and Alumni Schedule
Special Homecoming Events

While the general public is taking in
the events of Community-University Day
Oct. 21, students and alumni will have
the extra bonus of activities planned for
Homecoming ’72.

A wine and cheese reception will be
sponsored by the alumni on Friday, Oct.
20, from 7-9:30 p.m. in the Art Gallery.
Everyone is welcome. At 9 p.m. doors
will open at the Gym for a concert fea-
turing Rita Coolidge and Kris Kristoffer-
son.

Film Lecture To Open Series

Cinemaphile Arthur Lennig, associate
professor of art, will be the first lecturer
in the 1972-73 University Series which
begins Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the PAC
Recital Hall. His subject will be “The
Eloquence of Silence in Film Art.”

Program notes state that silent films
were not just slapstick comedy; many
were serious, dramatic masterpieces. Pro-
fessor Lennig will look at the develop-
ment of the cinema, with emphasis upon
the silent film and mores of early 20th
Century America. Film clips will be
shown.

Professor Lennig, who joined the fac-
ulty here in1966, has a doctorate in Eng-

lish from the University of Wisconsin. He
has written volumes and texts on silent
films in particular.

Film Notes, published in 1960, was
Professor Lennig’s first book. In 1965 his
second work, Classics of Film, was pub-
lished. Then, in 1967, The Silent Voice
was published by the Faculty-Student As-
sociation.

A theater critic described the latter
work as “a probing and perceptive analy-
sis of selected foreign and domestic films
and filmmakers of the 1920’s and earlier.”
It has been Professor Lennig’s lifelong
fascination with motion pictures which has
led to a teaching and writing career in the
cinema arts.

Sponsored by the University Concert
Board, the concert will have tickets
priced at $2.50 with student tax, $3.50
for dues-paying alumni, and $5 for all
others, The evening will conclude with a
Pizza Party in the CC Cafeteria from 10
p-m. to 2 a.m.

An Alumni Reception Center will
open on Saturday in the Patroon Lounge
at 10 a.m. and remain open until 4 p.m.
Coffee will be available, and visitors will
see displays of services provided by the
Alumni Association. An Alumni Tent
with food, beverages, and music will get
underway at 11 a.m. and continue until
after the football game.

The game itself, against SUC at
Brockport, is slated for 2 p.m. It will be
preceded at 1 p.m. by the annual Home-
coming Parade.

On Saturday night the Going Con-
cerns Trio will provide music for a Caba-
ret in the CC Ballroom from 9 p.m. to 1
a.m. No special Homecoming events have
been planned for Sunday.

Florence Hochstadter and Ann
Agresta are co-chairmen of the Home-
coming Committee of Student Associ-
ation’s Special Events Board. Martin Cama-
rata and Victor Looper chair the Home-
coming Committee for the Alumni As-
sociation,
Faculty Notes

ROBERT ALLEN, biology, made a pres-
entation on “Biophysical Aspects of Pseu-
dopod Extension and Retraction” at the
annual meeting of the American Society
for Cell Biology in New Orleans, La.

DONALD AXELROD, GSPA, is among
the co-authors of “Budgeting for Today’s
Campus,” published by McGraw-Hill.

JOSEPH BALFIOR, theatre, conducted a
session at the annual meeting of the New
York State Community Theatre As-
sociation in Rome, N.Y.

MARK BERGER, foundations of edu-
cation, delivered a paper entitled ‘‘Philo-
sophic Method and Educational Con-
cpts” at the annual meeting of the Philo-
sophy of Education Society in San Fran-
cisco.

PAUL BULGER, educational adminis-
tration, is the author of “Education as a
Profession,” published by the ERIC
Clearinghouse on Teacher Education.

ROBERT BURGESS, library science, is
author of an article, “Education for
Librarianship - U.S. Assistance”, which
appeared in Library Trends.

JARKA BURIAN, theatre, is the author
of an article on Otomar Krejaca’s use of
the mask in Czech theatre in The Drama
Review. He presented a paper on “Post-
war Tendencies in Czech Drama” at the
Northeast Modern Language Association
meeting at Skidmore College.

HENRY CHESSIN, physics, and EU-
GENE MCLAREN, chemistry, made a
presentation on “X-ray Spectrometric
Determination of Atmospheric Aerosols”
at a conference on applications of x-ray
analysis in Denver, Colo.

FRED COHEN, criminal justice, has been
elected to membership in the American
Law Institute.

LEON COHEN, GSPA, moderated a
panel discussion of legislative politics in
New York State at the 26th annual con-
ference of the New York State Political
Science Association. JOSEPH GUY, a
graduate student in GSPA, was a member
of the panel.

TARA DAS, physics, presented a paper,
“Syperfine Interaction and Zero-Field
Splitting in Hemin,” at the Fourth Inter-
national Biophysics Congress in Moscow,
USSR. Professor Das also participated in
a panel discussion on “Hyperfine Inter-
actions, Conduction Electron Polarization
and Their Relation to Band Structure in
Magnetic Materials” at an international
conference on “Perspective for Hyperfine
Interactions in Magnetically Ordered
Systems by NMR and Other Methods” in
L’Aquila, Italy.

WILLIAM FENTON, anthropology, has
written the foreword to Cartier’s Hoche-
laga and the Dawson Site, a new book on
the archaeology of Canada. He has also
written a tribute to his Iroquois collabo-
rator, Howard Sky, in the American An-
thropologist and is the author of a
chapter on Iroquois masks in the cata-
logue of a major exhibition of American

Indian art at the Minneapolis Institute of
Fine Arts in October.

ROBERT FINK, classics, is the author of
a book entitled Roman Military Records
on Papyri, which is published by the
American Philological Association.

LEONARD GORDON, educational
psychology and statistics, is the author of
an article, “Are There Two Extremeness
Response Sets?”, which appeared in Edu-
cational and Psychological Measurement,
and an article, “A Typological Assess-
ment of ‘A Study of Values’ by Q-
Methodology,” in the Journal of Social
Psychology.

J. MAYO GREENBERG, astronomy and
space science, presented a paper on
“Interstellar Grains” at the Symposium
on Cosmochemistry in Cambridge, Mass.

CALVIN HAGER, educational adminis-
tration, was among the leadership of a
conference, “Continuing Crisis in Sec-
ondary Education,” held at the Univer-
sity of Notre Dame.

RODNEY HART, admissions, has been
appointed New York State’s reporting of-
ficer for the American Association of Col-
legiate Registrars and Admission Officers’
Report of Credit Given by Educational
Institutions.

JAMES HEAPHEY, public administra-
tion, has edited a monograph, “Legisla-
tive Security”, published by the Research
Center, Graduate School of Public
Affairs, SUNYA. Other SUNYA contrib-
utors were ALAN BALUTIS, graduate
student in American political systems,
and DARON BUTLER, doctoral candi-
date in political science.

COLIN IZZARD AND HENRY TEDES-
CHI, biology, made a presentation on
“Interactions Between Ion Transport and
Phosphorylation in Mitochondria” at the
annual meeting of the American Society
for Cell Biology in New Orleans, La. Mr.
Izzard also made a presentation on “Cell
Movement by Filopod Contraction in the
Tunic of Botryllus schlosseri” at the
meeting.

BERNARD JOHNPOLL, GSPA, is the au-
thor of a series of articles appearing in
The Christian Science Monitor based on
interviews with the prime ministers of
Austria, Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.
He has been named a Research Fellow in
the Center of International Affairs by the
President and Fellows of Harvard College.

ROY KLAGES, marketing, has been
named chairman of the International Col-
lege Relations Committee of the Interna-
tional Sales and Marketing Executives. He
has also been elected to the board of the
local Sales and Marketing Executives.

RENO KNOUSE, distributive education,
is the editor of a research bulletin, “A
Distributive Teacher Education Curricu-
lum Theory Design,” published by Vir-
ginia Polytechnic Institute and State Uni-
versity.

FRANK KOLMIN, accounting, is the au-
thor of “Teaching Internal Auditing for

Managerial Decisions” in The Internal Au-
ditor and of “Banks, Environmental Prob-
lems, and Taxes” in The Banking Law
Journal. He is co-author of “Toward
More Effective Teaching in Professional
Areas” in Improving College and Uni-
versity Teaching and is a contributing au-
thor to the Handbook for Auditors.

JAMES LEONARD, theatre, is the author
of “Correspondence and Confrontation
between William Duffy, Manager, and
John Hamilton, Actor” in Theatre Sur-
vey, The American Journal of Theatre
History.

RONALD LEY, educational psychology
and statistics, is co-author of an article,
“Scaled-Rated Meaningfulness of 319
CVCVC Words and Paralogs Previously
Assessed for Associative Reaction Time,”
published in the April edition of the Jour-
nal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Be-
havior.

DONALD LIEDEL, history, chaired a
meeting on “Pornography and Censor-
ship” and delivered a paper on “Censor-
ship of Abolitionist Literature” at the an-
nual meeting of the Popular Culture As-
sociation in Ohio. His article, “Slavery
and Abolition: Stanley Elkins and His
Critics,” appeared in the Journal of Popu-
lar Culture.

WALTER LIFTON, guidance and coun-
seling, was the guest speaker at a work-
shop, “A Team Approach to Career De-
velopment,” in Guerneville, Calif.

JOHN MACKIEWICZ, biology, is the au-
thor of an extensive review article on un-
segmented tapeworms in Experimental
Parasitology and co-author of an article,
“Relationship of Pathology to Scolex
Morphology among Caryophyllid
Cestodes,” in Zeitschrift fur Parasiten-
kunde.

HEDI MCKINLEY, social welfare, has
been elected to membership in the Ameri-
can Association of Marriage and Family
Counsellors.

JAMES McNALLY, rhetoric and public
communication, gave a paper entitled
“The Grammar of Communications Acts”
at the Speech Communication Associa-
tion Convention held in San Francisco.

GEORGE MICHEL, educational adminis-
tration, is the recipient of the 1972 Dis-
tinguished Achievement Award of the
Education Press Association of America
for his article, “The Next Big Quake and
California’s Crumbling Schools,” in Cali-
fornia School Boards.

MARK MONMONIER, geography, pres-
ented a paper entitled “Socioeconomic
Controls on Spatial Variations in the
Physician Population” to the Pennsyl-
vania Academy of Science.

FREDERICK MOORE, romance lan-
guages, has received a Sesquicentennial
Award from Hobart and William Smith
Colleges in conjunction with Hobart
College’s 150th anniversary.

WILLIAM MULVEY, educational com-
munications, has published an article

entitled “A Media Marriage for Teaching
Poetry” in Educational Technology.

EDWIN REILLY, computer science, gave
a talk on “Technical Aspects of Com-
puter Center Management” at the Ameri-
can Management Association Data Pro-
cessing Conference in New York City.

SIDNEY REISBERG, prototype teaching
program, served on the program planning
committee for the 1973 National Con-
ference on Higher Education.

ROBERT RIENOW, GSPA, has been
elected to a three-year term as a member
of the board of directors of the Rachel
Carson Trust for the Living Environment
of Washington, D.C. The trust was
created in response to a plea by Miss Car-
son, author of The Silent Spring, just be-
fore her death in 1964, It is dedicated to
provide a clearinghouse or intelligence
center for the environmental movement.

WARREN SCOTT, general studies, served
as a discussion leader for a seminar on
“The Future of Mankind and the Role of
Christian Churches in a World of Science-
Based Technology,” sponsored by the
Capital Area Council of Churches.

WILLIAM SHORT, Milne, has been in-
vited to serve as a panelist on the “Crea-
tivity in Culture” panel at the New York
State Association of Foreign Language
Teachers conference at Kiamesha Lake.

RICHARD SOGLIUZZO, theatre, is the
author of an article about Italy’s Dario
Fo in The Drama Review.

JOSEPH SZOVERFFY, comparative lit-
erature, has been appointed to the Selec-
tion Committee for the Scholars’ Library
of the Modern Language Association of
America. He is also secretary of the Bibli-
ographical and Research Committee of
Comparative Literature, Section VII, and
has been elected secretary of the Seven-
teenth Century Section of the North
Eastern Modern Language Association.

JAMES TEDESCHI, psychology, is co-
author of “Economic Development and
Social Conflict: A Cross-Cultural Study
of Americans and Ghanians” in Human
Relations and “Esteem and the Effective-
ness of a Verbal Reinforcer” in The Jour-
nal of Social Psychology.

PHILLIP TOMPKINS, rhetoric and public
communication, presented a paper on
“The Rhetoric of Film” at the Speech
Communication Association Convention
in San Francisco, Calif.

NURA TURNER, professor emeritus,
gave an address on “The First USA
Mathematical Olympiad and Related As-
pects” at the 2nd International Congress
on Mathematical Education held in Eng-
land. She also served as discussion leader
on two occasions at the congress.

J. PAUL WARD, international student
advisor, has been named to serve on the
Region X, National Association for For-
eign Student Affairs Executive Com-
mittee for 1972-73.

NATHAN WRIGHT, Afro-American
studies, presented a paper on new black
higher educational needs at the First Na-
tional Congress of Black Professionals in
Higher Education held in Austin, Texas.

WALTER ZENNER, anthropology, is the
author of an article, “Aquiili Agha: The
Strongman in the Ethnic Relations of the
Ottoman Galilee,’ in Comparative
Studies in Society and History.
CAMPUS CLIPBOARD

ALL UNIVERSITY EVENTS

MONDAY (2) J.S.C. SUCCOTH BOOTH - 8 am to 12 M - CC Formal Gardens
E HOUR - DELTA SIGMA PI - 9 am to 1 pm - 3rd Floor Lounge B.A. Building - Admission Free

TUESDAY (3) NEWMAN ASSOCIATION RELIGIOUS SERVICE - 8:30 am to 10:10 am - CC 370
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE - 10 am to 4 pm - CC Ballroom

WEDNESDAY (4) NEWMAN ASSOCIATION RELIGIOUS SERVICE - 11:10 am to 12 N - CC 370
RUSSTAN CLUB FILM "And Quiet Flows the Don" - 7:30 pm - CC Assembly Hall - Admission Free
INTERNATIONAL STUDENT ASSOC, LECTURE “Interest-Free Banking" by Dr. Siddiqi - 9 pm to 11 pm - CC 315

THURSDAY (5) NEWMAN ASSOCIATION RELIGIOUS SERVICE - 11:10 am to 12 N - CC 370
OTIC TAL EMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 18

FRIDAY (6) EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE PRESENTS EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY'S classic one-act play "Aria
ja Capo" - 4 pm (Preview), 7:30 pm and 9 pm - Arena Theatre, PAC - Admission Free
I.F.G. FILM - 7:15 pm and 9:45 pm - LC 25 - Admission $.25 with student tax card, $.75 without
TOWER EAST CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 7 - Admission $.50 with State Quad card, $1.00 without
SUNYA CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 18 - Admission $.50 with tax card and I.D., $1.00 without
FREE MUSIC STORE CONCERT - "Frederick Rzewski, Pianist" - 8:30 pm - Recital Hall, PAC - Admission Free
CAMPUS CENTER GOVERNING BOARD COFFEE HOUSE - 9 pm to 12 M - CC Assembly Hall

SATURDAY (7) EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE PRESENTS EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY'S classic one-act play "Aria
apo" - 7:30 pm and 9 pm - Arena Theatre, PAC - Admission Free
SUNYA CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 18 - Admission $.50 with tax card and 1.D., $1.00 without
J.S.C. FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 1 - Admission $.50 members, $1.00 non members
TOWER EAST CINEMA FILM - 7:30 pm and 10 pm - LC 7 - Admission $.50 with State Quad card, $1.00 without
CAMPUS CENTER GOVERNING BOARD COFFEE HOUSE - 9 pm to 12 M - CC Assembly Hall

SUNDAY (8) CHI SIGMA THETA - RUSH EVENT - Ice Cream Social - 3 pm to 5 pm - CC 375
HE GROUP FOR EARLY MUSIC PRESENTS "A Medieval Pastiche or The Dark Ages Illuminated" - 8:30 pm -
Main Lobby, PAC - Admission Free
EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE PRESENTS EDNA ST. VINCENT MILLAY'S classic one-act play "Aria Da Capo" -
7:30 pm and 9 pm - Arena Theatre, PAC - Admission Free

MEETINGS

MONDAY (2) CAMP BOARD - 8 am - CC 333 WOMEN'S LIB - BUSINESS MEETING - 7:30 pm - CC 315
MIDDLE EARTH IN-SERVICE TRAINING - 9 am - CC 375 CENTRAL COUNCIL FINANCE COMMITTEE - 7:30 pm - CC 373
SIMS - 6:30 pm - HU 354 AMIA FOOTBALL OFFICIALS - 8 pm - CC 375
MTG. FOR FACULTY MEMBERS INTERESTED IN LIN~-

GUISTICS - 7 pm - HU 290

TUESDAY (3) | MIDDLE EARTH IN-SERVICE TRAINING WSUA - 7:30 pm - CC 370
9 am - CC 375 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE ORG. - 7:30 pm - HU 18
AMIA SOCCER CAPTAINS - 3:30 pm - CC 370 YOUNG REPUBLICANS WKLY - 7:30 pm - CC 373
SIMS - 6:30 pm - HU 354 I.F.C. WKLY - 7:30 pm - CC 333
SMOKE WATCHERS - 7:30 pm - LC 25 SPECIAL EVENTS BOARD - 8 pm - CC 375

WEDNESDAY (4) MIDDLE EARTH IN-SERVICE TRAINING SMOKE WATCHERS - 7:30 pm - LC 25
9 am - CC 375 UNIVERSITY CONCERT BOARD - 7:30 pm - CC 370
SIMS - 5:30 pm - HU 354 CHESS CLUB - 7:30 pm - CC 373
CC GOVERNING BOARD - 6:30 pm - CC 375 OUTING CLUB - 7:30 pm - CC 315

THURSDAY (5) MIDDLE EARTH IN-SERVICE TRAINING CENTRAL COUNCIL - 7:30 pm - CC 375
9 am - CC 375 SUNYA GAY ALLIANCE - 8 pm - CC 315
SUPA/A MONTHLY - 12 N - CC 370

FRIDAY (6) MIDDLE EARTH IN-SERVICE TRAINING I.V.C.F. WKLY - 7 pm - PH 129
9 am - CC 375

SATURDAY (7) CHESS CLUB - 1 pm - CC 373
SUNDAY (8) SIMS - 3 pm - HU 354
ANNOUNCEMENTS.

"N.Y. WOMEN ARTISTS" AN EXHIBITION OF WORK BY 13 women, may be seen October 2 through November 5 at the
University Art Gallery, M-F 9-5; Sat. and Sun., 1-5.

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.

William Seymour

Show Features
Women Artists

“New York Women Artists,” an ex-
hibition of work by 13 women who live
and work in New York City, has opened
at the Art Gallery.

The show is a spin-off from two
earlier exhibitions, “Twenty-Six Con-
temporary Women Artists” organized by
critic Lucy Lippard for the Aldrich Mu-
seum in Connecticut, and “Thirteen Wo-
men Artists,” an exhibit organized by
artists and held at 117 Prince Street in
New York’s Soho District last spring. The
latter exhibition came about when a
group of women artists decided that it
was important as women and as artists to
mount a show of high professional
quality without the sponsorship of pa-
trons or institutions.

Among the artists represented in the
current show are Patsy Norvell, Sarah Dra-
ney, Audrey Hemenway, Mary Miss, Alice
Adams, Kazuko, Ann Marshall, Joyce
Robins, Helene Hui, Arlene Schloss, Eliza-
beth Murray, Paula Tavins, and Sharon Gil-
bert. The exhibit will continue until Nov. 5
during the gallery’s regular hours: Monday
through Friday, 9 to 5; Saturday and Sun-
day,1to5.

Volunteers Train
For Ambulances

One hundred five students, mostly
undergraduates, are taking the American
Red Cross standard and advanced first aid
courses on campus arranged by the Uni-
versity Volunteer Ambulance Service
which is exploring ways to accomplish
the establishment of such a service on
campus.

The students meet for instruction
weekly in one of three sections Monday,
Tuesday, or Wednesday at 7:30 in the
gymnasium. Classes are preliminary to a
New York State certified medical emer-
gency technician course to be offered
during the spring semester.

Proposals for the service have been
reviewed by the Student Affairs Office
and the Student Health Service. Now,
under the direction of Barry Michael
Bashkoff, prime mover in the effort, mat-
ters pertaining to incorporation and in-
surance are being examined before sub-
mission of a plan for approval to the uni-
versity.

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
7-4901, The “Tower Tribune” is printed
on recycled paper stock.

To Assist VP

William E. Seymour, director of the
Center for Economic Education for two
years and special assistant to the vice
president for academic affairs during that
period, has been reassigned. He now is
special assistant to Vice President for Uni-
versity Affairs Lewis P. Welch.

In his new capacity Mr. Seymour will
seek to articulate and reinforce SUNYA’s
public service function. This will include
the development of systems to mobilize,
deploy, and share appropriate university
resources with groups, organizations, and
agencies in the larger community seeking
assistance with training and problem-
solving needs. Mr. Seymour will be con-
cerned particularly with the stimulation
of on-campus and off-campus pro-
gramming for various publics, as en-
couraged in the SUNY Master Plan.

The new appointee has been on the
faculty since 1958. In 1969-70 he served
as special assistant to President Allan A.
Kuusisto. Earlier he was associate dean of
graduate studies, director of summer ses-
sions, coordinator of sponsored research
and programs, and director of special aca-
demic programs.

Mr. Seymour currently is president
of the Cooperative Extension Association
of Albany County and chairman of its
board directors. He also has served on the
New York State Council on Economic
Education.

ROY KLAGES, coordinator and faculty chairman of the United Fund/Joint Appeal
campaign on campus, looks over campaign plans with Bette Herzog, executive as-
sistant, and Leon Calhoun, administrative chairman.

‘Round the Campus

The second bloodmobile visit of the semester is scheduled for tomorrow from 10 a.m.
to 4 p.m. in the CC Ballroom. . .Alice Corbin, student activities, reports that 195 pints
of blood were donated here on Sept. 6. The amount helped significantly to replenish
the low supply of available blood. Sponsors were apologetic about the long wait
experienced earlier this year by many donors in the afternoon. There is seldom a
waiting line in the mornings and donors are encouraged to make appointments by
calling 7-6594. . .The index, two pages of revised regulations, and the “Who’s Who” of
the Senate, its committees and councils, together with covers will be mailed to faculty
members later this week. ..During its Sept. 21 meeting Central Council approved
proposals to mandatorily include at least one freshman on the Athletic Advisory Board
and to appropriate $1,094.40 for the Amateur Radio Club, an organization started last
year and providing short wave radio facilities for any member of the university com-
munity. The club’s equipment is located in Livingston Tower on Colonial Quad...

Great Dane Sports

Albany will meet Siena at 7 p.m.,
Dec. 29, in the first round of the 12th
annual Capital District Basketball Tourna-
ment. Host Union will play RPI at 9
o'clock with consolation and champion-
ship games scheduled the following eve-
ning.

For the first time since the four local
schools began competing in 1969, a blind
draw was used for first round pairings.
Previously, it was pre-determined that
arch-rivals Albany and Siena would not
meet the opening night, nor would an-
cient rivals Union and RPI.

seek

The annual triangular cross-country
meet among Albany, RPI, and Siena will
be held on campus at 3:30 Wednesday
afternoon. The Great Danes have never
lost to Siena in 13 meetings and have lost
just once (in 1969) in nine meets with
RPI.

Siena’s outstanding sophomore, Joe
Rukanshagiza, must be considered the
man to beat, but Albany coach Bob Mun-
sey says his team “isn’t giving him
(Rukanshagiza) an inch. I expect Vinny
Reda, and maybe one or two of our other

Linguists Meet

Faculty members interested in lin-
guistics will meet this evening at 7 in HU
290, according to an announcement by
Francine Frank, coordinator for lin-
guistics.

Items for discussion include a pro-
posal for an undergraduate major in lin-
guistics; reorganization of linguistics/
English/anthropology 206, introduction
to linguistics, for the 1973-74 academic
year; and organization of a series of regu-
lar linguistic colloquia.

The approval of an undergraduate in-
terdisciplinary major provides an op-
portunity to propose a major in lin-
guistics. Work in that direction was begun
last year,

runners, will really press Rukanshagiza,”
he concluded.

sek

The first night game in Albany’s brief
football history is scheduled at Niagara
University at 7:30 p.m. Saturday. The
Purple Eagles have most of the players
returning from the team that lost here a
year ago, 35-20.

The Albany coaching staff chose the
following players-of-the-week in the
Stony Brook opener: offensive back Mar-
vin Perry, 82 yards rushing and the first
touchdown; offensive lineman Andy Lee;
defensive lineman Dom Pagano, 11
tackles and caused a fumble; and defen-
sive back Tim Myers, a key interception
and 12 tackles.

seek

The women’s tennis team will host
Vassar at 3:30 Tuesday afternoon, then
compete in the Eastern Collegiate Tour-
nament at New Paltz, Friday and Satur-
day. The JV team will entertain Coble-
skill, 3:30 today, and Hudson Valley,
3:30, Thursday.

eee

Other men’s teams in action on cam-
pus this week: tennis ys. Oneonta, Friday
at 3:30; soccer vs. Cortland, Saturday at
2; JV cross-country vs. RPI, Wednesday
at 4, and vs. FMCC, Saturday at 1; and
JV soccer vs. Adirondack Saturday at 11

AMIA Meetings

There will be a meeting of AMIA
soccer captains tomorrow afternoon at
3:30 in CC 356. Rosters are due at that
time.

A cross-country meeting is scheduled
next Tuesday, Oct. 10, at 4 p.m. in CC
315. Team and individual entries will be
due then.

Any questions concerning AMIA ac-
tivities should be directed to Dennis
Elkin, CC 356,

Eighty students from 28 nations are new
students on campus this fall. With 236
continuing students, the total represents
the highest number of overseas students
enrolled at one time...The University
Wind Ensemble, conducted by Charles
Boito, performed Friday at the Guilder-
land Middle School. Included on the pro-
gram were works by Berlioz and de Falla.
It was the first of four concerts planned
for the fall semester. The next will be on
Community-University Day, Oct. 21,and
will be outdoors if weather permits. . .A
group of students interested in estab-
lishing an ambulance service on campus
has started refurbishing a ’64 Dodge van
in the event their hopes for such a service
materialize. They are redesigning its in-
terior, cleaning and painting it, and
making necessary interior installa-
tions. ..The Capital Section of the New
York State Art Teachers Association, will
hold a conference here Oct. 12 on the
open school and the art teacher, planned
to assist art teachers in finding their place
in the open school. ..The lease held by
the Atmospheric Sciences Research Cen-
ter at Schenectady County Airport has
been extended a year, doubling the
present yearly rent of $15,000. For some
time the location of the ASRC facility
had been in doubt.

Campus Exchange

FOR SALE: 1963 Chrysler New Yorker,
4-door hardtop, excellent running con-
dition, bucket seats, many extras. Call
439-1688...... GE refrigerator, 17 cubic
feet, frost free, 10 months old, $290. Call
271-6447 after 6 p.m...... 3-bedroom
raised ranch, 1% baths, family room,
living room, dining room, attached 2-car
garage, wooded lot, $33,500. Call
371-5177.

WANTED: Riders from Amsterdam to
SUNYA daily; leave Amsterdam 8:15
a.m., leave SUNYA 5 p.m. Call
71-3390... .. Owners for free kittens,
male, ack siamese mixed. Call
869-0140...... Typing, bookkeeping to
do in home, experienced. Call 869-0140.

Metadata

Containers:
Box 3, Item 107
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Date Uploaded:
February 24, 2022

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