Tower Tribune, Vol. 3, No. 33, 1972 June 26

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Tribune

Vol. 3, No. 33

June 26, 1972

THE BIL BAIRD MARIONETTES were among the many productions for and/or by

children at the ASSITEJ Congress on campus last week. Baird has been one of the
world’s foremost puppeteers for more than 30 years.

Conference on Children’s Theatre
Draws Delegates from 32 Nations

The university was host last week to
some 500 delegates and several hundred
performers, technicians, and guests of the
fourth biennial Congress of __ the
International Association of Theatres for
Children and Young People.(The initials
ASSITEJ refer to the association’s name
in French.) It was the first congress held
in the United States.

Thirty-two nations were represented at
the congress, including authorities in

Students Plan
Fall Schedules

About 260 incoming freshmen are on
campus for the first of six freshman
Summer Planning Conferences scheduled
through July. The three-day conferences
will give the new students an orientation
to both academic and extra-curricular
aspects of student life. An important part
of the conferences is the planning of each
student’s fall courses.

Students are housed in Paine, Zenger,
and Clinton Halls on Colonial Quad,
giving them a taste of residence life. In
addition, each freshman conference will
have special presentations for students
who will be residents and for those who
will be commuters.

Other programs will include
presentations on departmental majors,
pre-professional programs, and the Middle
Earth/Crisis 5300 operation. The
freshmen also will have a picnic at the
Mohawk Campus.

Orientation for transfer students will be
accomplished in four two-day sessions.
About 200 transfers are expected at each.
They also will live in residence and plan
their fall courses. Their special
presentations will be on pre-professional
programs and the placement service.

James P. Doellefeld, student activities
advisor, is coordinator of the conferences.
William Motto, a May graduate, is
assistant coordinator. Their staff includes
12 student conference assistants and
three other student assistants.

every field of theatre endeavor. ASSITEJ
is the only official international
organization uniting professional and
non-professional theatres for children and
young people.

In Albany, delegates attended official
business sessions, workshops and special

presentations on creative drama and
children’s theatre, and an extensive
exhibit of children’s theatre art,

coordinated by Donald Mochon, SUNYA
art professor.

Highlighting the session were
performances by five U.S. and several
foreign theatre groups. U.S. companies
were from Atlanta (2); Hopkins, Minn;
New York City; and Minneapolis. Among
foreign groups were those from Russia,

Rumania, and Canada. The Central
Children’s Theatre of Moscow’s
performance was presented in the

Saratoga Performing Arts Center. Other
programs were held in the SUNYA PAC.

Patricia Snyder, assistant professor of
theatre at SUNYA, was local
arrangements chairman.

Varied Summer Programs

Attract 5,000

A final enrollment of about 5,000 is
estimated for the 1972 summer sessions,
as registration continues through today
for the six-week regular session (II) and
two three-week intensive sessions (Ila and
IIb). The first three-week intensive ses-
sion (1) ended Friday. Evening classes in
Session II hold their first meetings
tonight, and day classes in Sessions II and
Ila begin tomorrow.

Among the students will be approx-
imately 550-600 students who are reg-
ularly enrolled in other colleges and uni-
versities during the academic year. The
majority of them live in the Albany area
and are able to combine a summer at
home with some extra work toward their
degrees,

If patterns established in the past are
followed this year, the largest numbers of
special students will be from other units
of the State University. Private colleges
which have been well-represented in the
past have been Cornell, Syracuse, and
Boston universities and the private
schools in the Capital District area.

Summer visitors from other schools
are on the faculty as well, although
budget cutbacks this year have kept their
number down. About 20 are here, most
from the New York-New England area.

An exception is Harriett Covey, a co-
ordinator of young adult services for the
Los Angeles County Public Library
System in California. She is teaching
courses offered by the School of Library
and Information Science. Closer to home,
Carl Niemeyer, Lamont Professor of Lit-
erature at Union College, will be teaching
a course on the works of Fitzgerald,
Hemingway, and Faulkner.

Several professionals in the field of
opera will be on hand for the Opera
Workshop held in collaboration with the
Lake George Opera Festival and the Sara-
toga Performing Arts Center. The work-

Students

shop is under the direction of John
Moriarty, conductor of the Lake George
festival and a member of the faculty at
the New England Conservatory of Music.
The stage director of the New York City
Opera, Patrick Bakman, and the assistant
conductor of the Metropolitan Opera,
George Posell, are on the faculty.

Course work will be done off-campus
as well as on this summer. Archaeology
students will be working at digs in the
Hudson Valley, coastal Maine, the Sus-
quehanna Valley, or highland Guatemala.
Science students will complete a variety
of courses in environmental biology at
the Cranberry Lake Biological Station in
the Adirondacks.

Two programs are being conducted
in England. One will focus on British
theater, the other will study innovations
in British education, Foreign language
study is planned in nine countries.

In addition to courses, a variety of
non-credit conferences, seminars, work-
shops, and institutes will be held through-
out the summer.

Arena Theatre

The Arena Theatre, revived after a
two-year hiatus, will present two
productions this summer. Jarka Burian is
the producer.

Joan Littlewood’s theatrical _ satire,
“Oh, What a Lovely War!”, will be
presented July 19-22 in the Main Theatre
of the Performing Arts Center. Robert
Sugarman will direct.

Jean Louis Barrault’s dramatization of
Kafka’s “The Trial” is scheduled for July
26-29 in the PAC’s Arena Theatre.
Directing will be Clinton Atkinson, a
visiting staff member here this summer.

Single tickets for reserved seats are
$2.50 each. A subscription to both plays
is $4. Tickets will be mailed or held at the
box office. All performances start at 8:30
p.m.

Extensive ‘Summeract’ Program Begins

Funds from Student Association will
be supporting the summer activities pro-
gram this year, and an extensive schedule
of social, cultural, and recreational activi-
ties has been planned. The kickoff event
is a wienie roast tonight on Colonial
Quad.

Future Monday nights will bring a
series of folk concerts featuring campus
talent such as the Star Spangled Wash-
board Band, Hector Rivera, and John
Simpson. A jazz series is in the works for
Tuesday nights, and a series of “un-con-
certs” is slated for Thursday nights. In
addition, buses will be running to selected
concerts at the Saratoga Performing Arts
Center (SPAC).

Wednesday nights will bring a series
of films at 7:30 and 9:45 in LC 7. This
Wednesday the features will be Anne ofa
1,000 Days and Pawnshop. Films will be
shown also on Sunday nights in the

Colonial Quad Flag Room. Phantom of
the Opera and What Ever Happened to
Baby Jane? will be featured this Sunday.

The Mohawk Campus will be the set-
ting for a mid-week series of lecture-
discussions from 2-5 p.m. Tim Smith, an
Albany mechanic, will give the first one
this Wednesday on the basic theory of
auto mechanics, Sports and swimming are
also available at the Mohawk.

Thursday ice cream socials begin this
week from 12 noon to 2 p.m. on the CC
Mall. Buy a scoop of ice cream and add
all the toppings yourself.

The Educational Opportunities Pro-
gram Student Association (EOPSA) is
sponsoring a number of events in con-
junction with the Student Association
“Summeract” program. The first of these
will be an Afro-American Party Friday at
9 p.m. in the Colonial Quad U Lounge.

On Sunday two buses will leave from
the Administration Circle at 7 p.m. to go
up to SPAC for the Melba Moore Con-
cert. Tickets are available at the EOP

office or the Student Activities office.
A weekly publication, Sunstroke,

will be available each Friday at the CC
information desk and will give specific
information on upcoming events.

Admission will be charged to many
of the events. A “Summeract” tax card is
available to all students and staff at the
university and offers substantial reduc-
tions on admission prices. The cards are
$3 for the full session and $1.50 for each
half session. They are available all this
week from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at a desk in
the CC Lobby and will be sold at individ-
ual events this week, The tax card will be
valid for both “Summeract” and EOPSA
events.
Two Lauded
As Teachers

SUNYA honored two of its finest
teachers this year by designating them as
the first recipients of its Outstanding
Teacher Awards. Richard D. Kelly,
associate professor of biological sciences,
and John T. Therrien, associate professor
of mathematics, survived competition
among 69 candidates to win the honor,
which carries with it a certificate and a
check for $2,000.

The awards were established by the
University Senate, and the money is
provided by the SUNYA Foundation,
Inc. The candidates were nominated from
800 teaching faculty and chosen by a
special faculty-student committee.
Criteria for selection included the letters
of nomination, opinions solicited from
the candidates’ departmental colleagues,
and the results of questionnaires
completed by nearly 4,500 students.

Both Dr. Kelly and Mr. Therrien are
alumni of SUNYA, having earned their
bachelor’s and master’s degrees here.
Both have been the recipients of grants
and fellowships, and both have been
members of the Kettering Foundation
Project to Improve College Teaching.

Dr. Kelly joined SUNYA’s faculty in
1963. In 1965 he completed doctoral
studies at Syracuse University. His special
interest is in developing multi-media and
audio-tutorial approaches to biology
instruction.

Mr. Therrien did postgraduate work at
Lehigh University, RPI, and Bowdoin
College before joining the faculty at
SUNYA in 1959. He has been active on
seyeral university committees including
the Curriculum Committee of the
Undergraduate Academic Council.

MARY ANN BOOR has been appointed

coordinator for women’s rights on
campus. She has assumed her duties in
the Office of Equal Employment
Opportunity after being transferred from
the Personnel Office. She has been with
the university since 1970.

Open for Talent

The university has adopted a “talented
student admissions program” (TSAP) that
will set aside a maximum of 5% of each
incoming freshman class for students
displaying excellence in a particular field.
The program, which was approved by the
Undergraduate Academic Council, will
take effect for the freshman class entering
in the fall of 1973.

Eligible for admission under the new
program will be an applicant who is
participating in a college preparatory
program in his high school and who has at
least an 80% average or is in the upper
50% of his class. Comparatively, the
average student admitted as a freshman at
the university last fall carried an
approximate 90% high school grade.

OUTSTANDING TEACHERS Richard D. Kelly (I.) and John T. Therrien (r.) stand
with SUNYA President Louis T. Benezet.

Campus Security Reports Reveal
Decrease in Crime from 1971

Crime on campus went up during April
and May but the figures indicate a
decrease when contrasted with the totals
for the same months in 1971, according
to monthly reports by James R. Williams,
director of security.

Sixty-five crimes were reported during
April, representing a 9 per cent increase
over the preceding month and a 29 per
cent decrease when contrasted with
figures for April 1971, The cumulative
value of property reported stolen during
the month was $2,956. Crimes included
robbery, 1; sexual abuse, 1; reckless
endangerment, 1; burglary, 6; grand
larceny, 6; petit larceny, 24; threat, 6;
criminal mischief, 15; criminal trespass, 1;
leaving scene of accident, 2; criminal
possession of forged instrument, 1; and
public intoxication, 1.

Lampert Re-elected
To SA Presidency

Michael Lampert was elected in May to
an unprecedented second
president of Student Association. He
served as the school’s youngest vice
president two years ago.

Mr. Lampert, a senior majoring in
political science with a second field in
thetoric and communication, plans to
attend law school following graduation.
He is a member of Signum Laudis,
academic honorary society, and
MYSKANIA, non-academic honorary.

Eric Joss was elected vice president. He
also is a political science major expecting
to attend law school. He is founder and
president of the Pre-Law Society and
president of the Undergraduate Political
Science Society. He also was elected to
Signum Laudis and MYSKANIA and is a
member of Sigma Tau Beta fraternity.

During the past year Mr. Joss was a
member of Central Council and chairman
of its finance committee, responsible for
receipts and expenditures totaling more
than $250,000 annually.

term as

Opera Performance

“Gallantry”, a performance by the
Capital Artists Resident Opera Company,
will be held Thursday at 11 a.m. in the
CC Assembly Hall. Admission is free and
the performance is open to the public. It
is being held in conjunction with EC & I
515, a workshop in aesthetic
development.

During the month of May, 73 crimes
were reported, representing a 12 per
increase over April. The reported value of
stolen or damaged goods totaled $7,067.
The crimes were assault, 3; burglary, 6;
grand larceny, 7; petit larceny, 37; false
reports, 7; criminal mischief, 8; criminal
trespass, 2; leaving scene of accident, 1;
and possession of stolen property, 2.

To date this year the largest number of
crimes are petit larceny and criminal
mischief.

Symposium Held

Many of the world’s foremost
astronomers, chemists, and physicists
attended the International Astronomical
Union Symposium Number 25 on
Interstellar Dust and Related Topics here
at the end of May. Scientists from some
20 countries participated and
approximately 80 papers were presented.

President Benezet, who welcomed the
participants, said in part: “If you will
forgive a certain presumption, I should
like to dedicate this Symposium on
Interstellar Dust not only to its own
absorbing agenda, but also to the
achievement of one additional victory in
the fight to preserve ‘Man Thinking’ —
which, you will recall, was Emerson’s
simple definition of the scholar.”

J. Mayo Greenberg, SUNYA professor
of astronomy and space science, was
chairman of the organizing committee.

Rain Dampens
Commencement

For Graduates

Rain marred commencement exercises
for almost 3,900 graduates and their
guests on May 20. Separate ceremonies
were held in the gymnasium for those
receiving bachelor’s degrees and for
others being awarded graduate degrees.

Bachelor’s degrees were awarded to
2,274 seniors at a 2 p.m. ceremony and
some 1,500 master’s degrees, 87
doctorates, and 44 University Certificates
were conferred at 4 p.m.

Among the graduates were 27 students
who had entered with the first group of
freshmen under the Educational
Opportunities Program in 1968. Ten
students who had transferred into EOP
also were graduated.

The Class of ’72 included 445 seniors
who earned their degrees cum laude, 153
who earned theirs magna cum laude, and
29 who were graduated summa cum
laude. \t was the last class to have A-E
letter grading for all four years.

The Signum Laudis Scholar was Karen
Jeanne Goodman. She was graduated
with a Bachelor of Science in the teaching
program. Her major and second field were
science,

Author Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., in his
commencement address, called for the
birth of “an American people” who will
become a “family in order to take care of
one another the way families do.” He
told the new graduates that “you, our
new generation of adults, must organize

us” that way.
At the traditional Torch Night
ceremony held on the eve of

commencement, it was announced that
the Class of °72 had established a
scholarship fund of more than $4,000 to
be placed in the Alumni Fund and
awarded annually to a SUNYA graduate
planning advanced study here. The fund
will be a continuing project of the class.

Hours for Library

During the summer session, June 26 -
Aug. 4, University Library hours will be
Mon, - Thurs., 8 a.m. -9 p.m.; Fri., 8 am.
- 5 p.m,; Sat., 9 a.m, - 5 p.m. The library
will be closed on Sundays and on July 4.

Reserve desk hours are Mon. - Thurs., 8
am. - 9 p.m.; Fri., 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Sat.,9
a.m. - 5 p.m. The Copy Center will be
open Monday through Saturday from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. The Reserve Book Reading
Room will remain open till midnight.

MARGARET REHFUSS MEEHAN (2nd from r.), recipient of a $400 history award
from the Daughters of the American Revolution, is congratulated by DAR members
Helen Bullard and Mrs. Allen Hotaling and SUNYA Dean of Undergraduate Studies
Robert B. Morris. Mrs. Meehan majored in history with a second field in social studies.
She is now attending summer school.
Albany Sportsmen Named
Scholar-Athletes, All-Stars

Junior Werner Kolln has received a
certificate from Chancellor Boyer as
Albany’s Scholar-Athlete of 1972 in the
SUNY Conference. Kolln, winner of two
varsity letters in basketball and three in
golf, carries a 3.81 cumulative grade
index as a chemistry major. He was first
string forward on last winter’s basketball
team, averaging 7.1 points a game, and
has been one of the top golfers since
making the varsity his freshman year.

seek
A number of other Albany
student-athletes also have received

awards. Senior distance runner Dennis
Hackett was named 1972 Scholar-Athlete
of the Year at the university. Kolln was
ineligible for this award, given annually to
a senior. Hackett had a 3.06 cumulative

Center Admits
Its First Class

“Bright, articulate, and concerned
about contemporary social issues.” That’s
how Seth W. Spellman, dean of the new
James E. Allen, Jr., Collegiate Center,
describes the first class of 53 high school
students selected for the new
time-shortened baccalaureate degree
program to be offered by the center. The
students, who have completed their third
year in high school, will be combining
their final year of high school and their
first year of college.

Dean Spellman pointed out that most
students in the initial year will come from
the Capital District area; however, some
will be coming from as far away as
Syracuse and Long Island. About half of
the student body will commute. Others
will live in Alden Hall. Classes and
administrative offices will be located in
Brubacher Hall.

Members of the new class will attend
the Summer Planning Conference sessions
Wednesday through Friday to be
conducted by the regular — staff.
Additionally, faculty members from the
program will meet especially with the
future center students and their parents.

index as a chemistry major and was Most
Valuable Runner as a freshman and twice
as a varsity performer in
cross-country. . Junior baseball players
Nick Ascienzo, pitcher, and Jack Leahy,
catcher, were chosen to both the Capital

District and SUNY Conference all-star
teams. Ascienzo was 4-0 with a miniscule

0.84 ERA, while Leahy batted .327 to
lead the 8-7-1 Great Danes. . Senior
goalie Tom Heister and junior midfielder
Jeff O'Donnell were picked to the
Northern New York Division Lacrosse
All-Stars. Heister averaged 20.7 saves a
game, while permitting only 4.7 goals.
O'Donnell led the 7-2 stickers with 18
goals... Basketball captain John
Quattrocchi was a second team selection
on the SUNY Conference All-Stars.
eee

Albany’s eleven intercollegiate teams
compiled a record of 76-55-2 during the
1971-72 season. Best were track (10-1),
lacrosse (7-2), cross-country (10-3), and
basketball (17-6). The tennis and
cross-country teams won championships
in the SUNY Conference. . Oneonta won
the conference All-Sports Trophy with 80
points. Albany was fifth with 59. Points
are awarded in each of the nine sports in
which the conference holds competition.
The team champion in a sport receives 11
points, second place team, 10, etc.

Soka

Three Albany coaches are involved in
summer sports schools on campus.
Basketball coaches Dick Sauers and Bob
Lewis are conducting a school for boys
10-12. The first of three one-week
sessions begins today. Others are July
10-14 and 17-21. Contact either Sauers
(489-4526) or Lewis (765-4617) for
additional information on registration.

Baseball coach Bob Burlingame and
former major league pitcher Bill Stafford
will direct two eight-day sessions for boys
10-15. Dates are July 5-14 and 19-28.

Students Given Grant To Study
Albany Area Aerosol Collections

“This is the first grant of its kind to be
received by students at SUNYA;
hopefully, it will act as an incentive for
other students here in the future to
become active in this type of endeavor.”
Jane Maddow, student project director,
was speaking about a $24,360 award
received here from the National Science
Foundation as part of the 1972 Student
Originated Studies Program for the
project, “Collection and Analyses of
Aerosols in the Albany Area”. The
information gathered will be used in an
attempt to alleviate air pollution.

Commented Sharon Normandin,
co-student director, “As well as providing
an opportunity for summer employment
for 15 students, a program of this nature
will increase the students’ research
techniques and general knowledge; it will
also stimulate interest in the vastly
important field of — environmental
research.”

Miss Maddow, an undergraduate
majoring in chemistry, is the official
recipient of the grant supporting the
summer project which will continue
through August. Fifteen students,
including majors in chemistry, biology,

Contact Burlingame (7-4571) for
additional information.
geology, atmospheric sciences, and

sociology, were selected from more than
50 interested students to participate in
the project and there are 10 alternates.
Each regular participant will receive $80 a
week for the 12-week period. Andrew J.
Yencha, is project advisor.

Pitt
ALAN W. GERTLER (I.) operates equipment involved in the colle
aerosols, a grant-supported project directed by Sharon E. Normadin and Jane Maddow
(r.). Faculty adviser Andrew J. Yencha looks on.

A PEAI
photo for Scott Mlyn in a student photography contest sponsored by the Alumni
Association. Mr. Mlyn also took first prize in the Color category.

Seniors, Student Photographers

Win Alumni Association Awards

Four graduating seniors and
continuing students received awards and
prizes from the Alumni Association at
Alumni Day on May 13. The awards to
seniors are traditional ones which have
been established over the years in
memory of alumni or faculty of the
school.

Winner of the Agnes E. Futterer Award
for the outstanding drama student was
Claudine Cassan. The Ada W. Risley
Award for the student outstanding in
history scholarship, athletics, and
leadership went to William Becker.
Douglas Anderson received the Mildred
Schmid Award for excellence in Classics,
and Judy Avner won the Ada Craig
Walker Award as the senior woman best
typifying the ideals of the university.

The seven continuing students were
prize-winners in a student photography
contest sponsored for the first time by
the Alumni Association. Scott Mlyn, a
junior, took first prize in both Color and
Black and White categories.

seven

Second prize in the Color category
went to Francis Duranza, a sophomore.

AF

n and analysis of

Freshman Alfonso Eguiguren won third
prize, and David Nilsen, also a freshman,
took fourth prize.

In the Black and White category, John
Chow, a junior, won second prize, Ann
Van Nostrand, a special student, was
third, and Sister Betty Dinovo, a graduate
student in General Studies, was fourth.

SUNY Alumni
Meet at Albany

SUNYA’s Alumni Association was the
host for “Direction 72”, the fifth annual

conference of the SUNY Alumni
Confederation. Held June 9-10 on
campus, it attracted more than 140

delegates from 36 campuses.

Among the featured speakers were
William G. Floyd, president of the
SUNYA Alumni Association; Louis T.
Benezet, SUNYA president; Charles
Lupton, executive the
foundation at  Pennyslvyania State
University; Clifton C. Thorne, SUNY vice
chancellor for university affairs; Hugh
Jones, member of the SUNY Board of
Trustees; and SUNY Chancellor Ernest
Boyer.

director of

In his keynote address, Vice Chancellor
Thorne noted State University’s
growing recognition of the alumni as
“one of its most valuable assets.”

the

In its first awards presentations, the
confederation recognized the campuses at
SUNY Buffalo, SUC Buffalo, SUC
Potsdam, Dutchess County Community
College, and Farmingdale and Alfred Ag
and Tech colleges for outstanding alumni
programs.

David W. Jenks, director of alumni

affairs at SUNYA, was among those
appointed to membership on the
confederation’s state-wide executive
council.
Sports Hours
For Summer

Facilities of the Physical Education
Building will be open to members of the
university community from 8 a.m. to 10
p.m., Monday-Friday, from tomorrow
through Aug. 3, except July 4. Twelve
tennis courts will be lighted until mid-
night throughout the summer session.

A lifeguard will be on duty at the
swimming pool from 2-4 p.m. and
7:30-9:30 p.m. Monday-Friday. From
11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., swimming will be
permitted if there are at least three quali-
fied swimmers wishing to use the pool.
University-owned swim suits are required
for women and available to men. Swim
caps are required for anyone with long
hair.

Towel service isavailablefor $1 and a
locker for $2. Both fees are payable at
the general office. Athletic equipment
may be checked out without charge and
must be returned the same day by 10
p.m.

Special tournaments will be con-
ducted in tennis, table tennis, and golf if
enough people sign up at the CC informa-
tion desk. Groups may reserve volleyball
and softball areas by signing up at the PE
general office.

Seeks Director

A search committee for an interim
director of the Environmental Studies
Program has been established by Dean I.
Moyer Hunsberger at the request of
Phillip L. Sirotkin, executive vice
president. The committee will report its
recommendations to Dean Hunsberger for
filling the post of interim director for the
1972-73 academic year, during which
time a search will be underway for a
permanent director to be named by
September 1973.

On the committee are Paul Bulger,
School of Education; Donald McNaught,
biological sciences; | Bruce Marsh,
geography; Jon Scott, atmospheric
science; Paul Marr, geography; Alden
Bean, School of Business; Robert
Rienow, political science; Margaret
Lindsay, School of Nursing; Richard
Kalish, economics; Vincent Schaefer,
ASRC; George Keleshian, Richard Morse,
and Ronald Schongar, undergraduate
students; and Peter Van Schoick,
graduate student. Justine Davidson is
serving as secretary for the committee.

Nominations should be sent to Mrs.
Davidson, AD 203, by July 15.

Professor Honored

David Peak, instructor of physics, has
been selected the 1972 outstanding
teacher in the Department of Physics by
the student opinion committee of the
Society of Physics Students. Selection is
based on the results of a questionnaire
distributed in the physics classes.

Dr. Peak has been on the faculty for
the past three years. He received a
Bachelor of Science in physics from State
University College at New Paltz and a
Doctor of Philosophy in physics from
SUNYA.

Tower Tribune

Published weekly when classes are in
session 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 one
week in advance to AD 235 or call 7-4901.
Name and address must be included.
Items for “Campus Exchange” should be
submitted to AD 262. All material is
subject to editing. The Tribune is printed
ontecycled paper stock.

VIRGINIA CAIRNS, associate director
of the Women’s Unit, Office of the Gov-
ernor, will be the keynote speaker at the
Educational Secretaries Conference being
held on campus today.

Swim Classes

Swimming instruction and stroke
improvement classes will be conducted by
the SUNYA Swim Club today through
‘Aug. 4, Monday-Friday, from 1-2 p.m.
The fee is $20 per person. Diving instruc-
tion will be given from 4:30-6 p.m.,
Monday-Wednesday, and 4:15-5 p.m. on
Friday today through Aug. 4. Fee is $20
per person.

Swim team practices also begin today
and continue through Aug. 4. Children 10
and under will practice from 9-10 a.m.
and over 10 will practice from 10-11:30
a.m. Team members pay a $20 fee, with
allowances made for families.

Interested persons may register at
any of the regularly scheduled sessions or
may contact Robert Zeh, 7-7531 or
371-4454 or Robert Guerrin, 7-8480.

’Round the Campus

The 1972 session of Empire Girls State is underway on campus this week. Sponsored
by the Women’s Auxiliary of the American Legion, the annual event will include 360
students and staff from throughout the state. . .During the summer the Patroon Room
will be open from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. when a buffet lunch will be served. .
SUNYA has received the gift of a rare plant from The Arnold Aboretum of Harvard
University. The Department of Biological Sciences is caring for the plant located near
its greenhouse. .. Summer session faculty are invited to attend a reception for visiting
faculty and their spouses on Thursday from 3-4:30 p.m. in the CC Patroon Lounge. . .
Student Association president Michael A. Lampert has been appointed to a summer
internship with the SUNY staff in Washington. . . Rev. Frank P. Snow, formerly of the
Campus Ministry of the Capital Area Council of Churches, was honored at a reception

in the Art Gallery prior to his departure
for Rochester. Serving on the staff of a
new group called Capital Area Ministries
of Higher Education and responsible for a
campus ministry throughout a four-
county area, which includes SUNYA, will
be Harvey Bates, formerly of Syracuse
University, and Andrew Smith, who has
been a chaplain at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute. ..The Fourth of July holiday
will be observed on campus next Tues-
day. There will be classes and office hours
as usual on Monday...Enrico Petri,
accounting, today will be awarded a certi-
ficate of merit for an article published in
Management Accounting and considered
in the National Association of Account-
ants annual manuscript competition. ..
William K. Holstein, recently of the Har-
vard Graduate School of Business Admin-
istration faculty, has been designated
acting dean of the School of Business. . .
Faculty and staff members who have
received no responses to their applica-
tions for group insurance are advised by
Robert G. Chatterton to call Rose Marie
Buttino at 372-5651 if the expiration
dates on their old policies are drawing
near. . John E. Morgan, formerly of the
Financial Aids Office, has been appointed
assistant dean of the School of Criminal
Justice.

SUNYA Employment Opportunities

Additional information about the
following employment openings is avail-
able from Sharon des Roches in AD 345:
x-72-1
x-72-3
x-724
P-72-2

Secretary
Twelve full-time fellowships
Typist
Professor-Assoc. Professor—
Geophysics
Professor-Assoc. Professor—
Russian
Asst. Professor—Russian
Assoc. Dean—Social and
Behaviorial Sciences
Electronic Technician—Biology
Instructor-Asst. Professor—
Rhetoric and Public Address
Postdoctoral Research Assoc.—
Biophysics-Physical Chemistry
P-72-11 Asst. Professor—English
P-72-14 Research Assoc.—ASRC
P-72-18 Asst. Professor—Marketing
P-72-24 Professor-Accounting and
Director-Accounting Program
P-72-28 Part-time Math Supervisor
P-72-30 Assoc. Director of the Public
Executive Project-SUNYA
P-72-34 Assoc. Professor—Marketing
P-72-36 Instructor—Nursing
P-72-38 Asst. Professor—Italian
P-72-39 Lab. Asst.—Biology(summer)
P-72-40 Research Asst.—Biology(summer)
P-72-42 Technical Asst.—Biology
P-72-44 Faculty Member and Chairman—
Afro-American Studies
P-72-45 Residence Director—Housing
P-72-46 Research Technician—
Biological Sciences
P-72-47 Postdoctoral Research Assoc.—
Biology
P-72-48 Asst. Professor—Library
Science
P-72-49 Postdoctoral Neurophysiologist
P-72-50  —Biology
P-72-51 Principal—Campus School
P-72-52 Research Assoc.—
P-72-53 _ Biology
P-72-54 Professor-Assoc. Professor—
Puerto Rican Studies

P-72-3

P-72-4
P-72-5

P-72-6
P-72-7

P-72-9

P-72-56 Professor—Philosophy of
Education

P-72-57 Manager—Performing Arts
Center

P-72-58 Lecturer—EOP

P-72-59 Asst. Professor—Sociology

P-72-61 Asst. Professor—Political
Science

P-72-62 Visiting Professor—
Philosophy

P-72-63 Asst. Director—Financial
Aids

P-72-64 Educational Opportunities
Coordinator—
Financial Aids

P-72-65 Asst. Professor—Geography

P-72-66 Research Associate—Physics

P-72-67 Asst. to Director—Campus
Center

P-72-68 Instructor—Milne School

P-72-69 Asst. Professor—History

P-72-70 Instructor—Psychology

P-72-71 Assoc. Professor—Sociology

P-72-72 Asst. Professor—Sociology

P-72-73 Visiting Professor—Music

P-72-74 Part-time Lecturer—Nursing

Lectures Slated
At Whiteface M

William Hartigan, a cinematographer
from Schenectady, will speak on “Adven-
tures in the Antartic” to open the lecture
series presented each summer by the
Atmospheric Sciences Research Center at
the center’s Whiteface Mountain Field
Station, Memorial Highway, Wilmington.
The weekly Tuesday evening series will
take place July 4 through Aug. 22 begin-
ning at 8:30.

Other speakers in the 1972 Whiteface
series will be John Dewey, professor of
geology, SUNYA, “The Evolution of
Oceans and Continents’, July 11; Clyde
Smith, free lance photographer, Sher-
burne, Vt., “The Colorful Adirondacks in \
All Seasons”, July 18; and Richard
Orville, professor of atmospheric science,
SUNYA, “Lightning Through A Lens”,
July 25.

Also, Wayne Trimm, art director,
Conservationist Magazine, New York
State Department of Environmental Con-
servation, ‘Science Adventures in
Scientific Illustrating”, Aug. 1; Edwin
Ketchledge, professor of forest botany,
State College of Forestry, Syracuse Uni-
versity, “Men and Nature in the Adiron-
dacks”, Aug. 8; Robert Yunick, director of
research, Schenectady Chemicals, “The
Relation of Bird Banding to Weather”,
Aug. 15; and Philip Walker, professor of
biology, SU College at Plattsburgh, “The
Mysterious Absence of Reptiles and
Amphibians in the Adirondacks”, Aug.
22;

A report on the latest weather, using
colored projections, will be presented be-
fore each lecture. Yearly attendance at
the lectures has grown from 708 in 1966
to 1,600 in 1971. One lecture last year
was presented twice to accommodate
some 400 persons.

SPA Officers Chosen

Newly-elected officers of the Albany
Chapter of the Senate Professional Asso-
ciation are Craig Sipe, president; Jeanne
Fisher, vice president; Harold Cannon,
treasurer; Donald Whitlock, vice president
for non-teaching professionals; Edith
Cobane and Katherine Heinig, members
of Representative Council, academic; and
Robert Gibson, member of the council,
non-teaching professional.

| Campus Exchange

FOR RENT: 3-bedroom house in
country, suitable for small family, 20-25
minutes from SUNYA, scenic view, lease
required, available July 1. Call 765-2727
after 6:30 p.m..... Garage apartment in
Loudonville, furnished, air conditioned,
all utilities, available Aug. 15, $160 per
month, Call 436-9227...... 1-bedroom
apartment, furnished, all-electric, air con-
ditioned, 7 minutes from campus, avail-
able June-August, $270 per month, Call
914-632-6063 or 456-9617 Saturdays
before 10 a.m.
FOR SALE: 3-bedroom brick ranch
house in Elsmere; living room, dining
room, kitchen, bath, breezeway, garage,
% acre lot, washer and dryer; near bus,
stores, school; $30,000. Call Mrs.

Edmund Van Wormer, 439-4265......
4-bedroom ranch house near campus, 6
years old, air conditioned, wall-to-wall
carpeting, drapes, immediate occupancy.
Call 482-7631 or 7-8330......
4-bedroom colonial house on Lenox
Avenue, living room with fireplace, dining
room, den, new cabinet kitchen, powder
room, porch, basement playroom, ceram-
ic tile bath, $41,900. Call
489-0764, . . Swivel secretarial chair,
nearly new, reasonable. Write Professor C.
Wolkonsky, Russian Summer School,
Norwich University, Northfield, Vt.
05663...... 1956 Dodge 1-ton pickup, 6
cyl., 3 speed, radio and heater, good con-
dition, $175. Call HE 8-1322 or HE
8-3293.

Metadata

Containers:
Box 3, Item 95
Resource Type:
Periodical
Rights:
Date Uploaded:
February 24, 2022

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