Press Releases, 1970 March

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SportsCast STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY | Director 0

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS] ROBERT H. RICE, JR.

IMMEDI ATE

ALBANY ANNOUNCES FOOTBALL CLUB PLANS

Athletic director Dr. Alfred C. Werner announced today that, pending
approval of its proposed 1970-71 budget, State University at Albany will field a
club football team this fall. The budget would include provision to hire an
additional physical education department member. Dr. Werner currently is seek-
ing a man who could coach football and lacrosse, in addition to his teaching assign-
ments in the department,

A six-game 1970 schedule has been prepared in anticipation of the university's
first intercollegiate football program. Three home and three away games have been
lined up for the fledgling gridders including home contests with neighboring Siena
College and Hudson Valley Community College. Home games will be played on
the field encircled by the running track behind the physical education building. Per-
manent bleachers on the steps of the buil ding will accommodate an estimated 2, 200
persons and temporary bleachers may provide additional seating.

Road contests are scheduled with Towson State College of Baltimore, Md.,
Marist College, and State University College at Plattsburgh. The season will
open with a home game against Rochester Institute of Technology on Homecoming
Saturday, October 10. Only Hudson Valley, a two-year school, and Towson State,
which played a club schedule last fall, will field varsity teams. The other foes,

however, all have experience as club teams,

(more)

1400 Washington Avenue @ Albany, New York 12203 ® Area Code 518 ® Tel. 457-4901-02-03
State University of New York at Albany
Football Club Plans -2-

‘The addition of football would bring to 11 the number of men's intercollegiate
sports at Albany. Varsity programs currently are administered in cross-country,
soccer, basketball, wrestling, swimming, track and field, lacrosse, baseball,
tennis, and golf. Junior varsity squads in cross-country, soccer, baseball, track
and field, golf, and tennis; and a freshman team in basketball also compete. A
sailing club, open to all men and women at the university, has fall and spring
intercollegiate competition,

The schedule:

Saturday, October 10 - Rochester Tech Home 2:00

Saturday, October 17 - Siena College Home 2:00

Saturday, October 24 - Towson State Away 2:00

Saturday, October 31 - Marist College Away 2:00

Saturday, November 7 - Plattsburgh State Away 1:00

Saturday, November 14 - Hudson Valley C.C. Home 1:00
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March 2, 1970
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
: H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS ie ee

A''pre-teach-in'' in preparation for the national environmental teach-in on
April 22 will be held at State University of New York at Albany this Friday
and Saturday. Initiated by Representative Richard Ottinger (D., Westchester)
and organized by SUNYA members of the Protect Your Environment (PYE) Club,
the weekend is designed to develop effective programs for the national TEENA this
spring. Miss Susan Cypert, PYE coordinator of the conference, expects up to 400
delegates in attendance from over 200 campuses and environmental action groups
in New York State.

Friday evening at 7:30 Congressman Ottinger will address the conference in
the university gymnasium, Mr. Ottinger's speech will emphasize the goals of the
teach-in and programs that environmental activists must initiate in order to gain
public support for environmental reform,

Dr. Robert Rienow, co-author of Moment in the Sun, and professor of political
science at SUNYA, will speak at 9 saturday morning. The remainder of Saturday
morning will be spent in workshops focusing on particular environmental problems,
Professionals from the community and universities in the tri-city area will provide
information to the workshops, which will be directed by members of PYE from SUNYA,
A report concerning the goals and methods for April 22 will be published from
the discussions in the workshops.

Jer IE

March 4, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901" 02 = 03

; IMMEDI ATE

Humor columnist Art Buchwald will speak at State University of New York
at Albany on Wednesday, March 11, at 8 p.m. in the Campus Center Ballroom.
His speech is entitled, ''The Establishment is Alive and Well in Washington."
His visit is sponsored by the campus Forum of Politics. Admission is one dollar.
Buchwald writes a syndicated column which is published three times a
week in over 400 newspapers throughout the world. He is the author of several
books, including "Have I Ever Lied to You?" (1968), "Son of the Great Society"

(1966), and".,.And Then I Told the President'' ( 1965).

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March 4, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
> H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 451190 DPA FBS
"Biological Productivity: A Current Perspective" is the subject of a ''Conversation
in the Disciplines" to be held at State University of New York at Albany, March 12-13.
A number of noted ecologists will be among the participants in the two-day conference
which is open to all State University faculty and students. It is sponsored by the
biology department.

Funded by a $2,000 grant from the SUNY Research Foundation, the program is one
of a series in which experts in a particular discipline gather to share their experience
and participate in discussions about trends and developments in that discipline. The
relationship of the productivity of various biological organisms to the stability of
the earth's environment will be a major concern of this week's conversation.

The conference will begin at 1:55 p.m. March 12 with a session on ''Fundamentals
of Productivity." The second session at 8:30 a.m. March 13 will be on ''Methodology
and the Development of New Concepts, '' and the third session at 2 p.m. March 13 will
consider "Current Directions.'' All sessions will be held in the CC Assembly Hall.

A dinner to be held at 7 p.m. March 12 in the Campus Center Ballroom will
feature John H. Ryther of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. He will discuss
the prospects of increasing the production of food from the sea. Current estimates
are that, at the present rate of growth of the world's fisheries, the total food potential
of the sea will be reached within the next decade.

Other participants in the program include Richard W. Eppley, Scripps Institution
of Oceanography; G. Wolfgang Fuhs, N. Y.S, Health Department; John Hobbie, North
Carolina State University; Gene Likens, Cornell University; Donald C. McNaught, SUNS
Howard T. Odum, University of North Carolina; Richard E. Pentoney, Syracuse Univer

sity; Michael Rosenzweig, SUNYA; Lawrence Slobodkin, SUNY at Stony Brook; Fred E,

Smith; Harvard University; Raymond G. Stross, SUNYA; andR. H. Whittaker, Cornell
University.
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March 4, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
" H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 | Af RHOOhE OTT 03

Sixty-two German Expressionistic works in various media, all from the
collection of The Museum of Modern Art, will be on view at the Art Gallery,
State University of New York at Albany from March 11 through April 5.

Recent prints by Robert Cartmell will be shown in the Gallery Lounge during
the same period as the Passionate Years exhibition. Mr. Cartmell, who is an
instructor in printmaking at SUNYA, received his M.F.A. in printmaking at the
University of Iowa before coming to Albany.

Prepared by Renee S. Neu, Assistant Curator in the Museum's Department of

Painting and Sculpture, The Passionate Years: Expressionism inGermany 1905-1930

surveys a movement spearheaded by younger artists who opposed the emphasis on
materialism which took hold in Europe during the two decades prior to World War 1.
Rejecting the Impressionist eagerness to paint the world as it appears to the eye, the
Expressionists soughtinstead to depict the world as it is experienced through emotions,
Hence, the appropriateness of the term "passionate years,"

The exhibition contains works by members of the two important Expressionistic
groups which emerged during the period of intellectual turmoil and great artistic
creativity prior to World War I: Die Bruke (The Bridge) in Dresdon and Berlin and
Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) in Munich. Also represented are a number of in-
dividual artists who were not affiliated with either of these groups but whose work is
closely related. Among those represneted are Ernst Barlach, Kathe Kollwitz, Wilhelm
Lehmbruck and Oskar Kokoschka.

The Passionate Years: Expressionism in Germany 1905-1930 contains 17 oils, 5
watercolors and 5 sculptures. Some 35 prints and drawings are also included since

both groups dedicated much of their effort to graphic art with Die Brucke issuing an
annual portfolio of etchings and lithographs from 1906-1912.

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March 4, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
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STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 » 02 * 03

IMMEDIATE

Gveek Weekend Festival, sponsored by the Contemporary Music Council

1 Events Board, Ti

ickets will be on sale in the Campus Center

Mayall

The Moody Biues

Each

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
: H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
IMMEDI ATE

Stephen O. Wilson, instructor of geography, State University of New York
at Albany, has been awarded a $14, 230 Science Faculty Fellowship for the next
full year by the National Science Foundation (NSF). He will be working at
Clark University, Worcester, Mass., and in the Lake George basin on the develop-
ment of measurement techniques for estimating man's role in lake eutrophication
processes,

Eutrophication concerns the process of aging, specifically, of a body of
water. Mr. Wilson will be conducting a social science survey and estimating
the total amount of man-made products, such as insecticides, detergents, and
fertilizers, being brought to, and consumed in, the Lake George basin.

Two years ago the geographer received a Research Participation Grant
from NSF for the study of aspects of the ecology of Lake George. The basin
has been designated as a focal point for ecological research by the International
Biological Program,

Mr. Wilson joined the SUNYA staff in 1966, He previously worked with the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution on transport of Atlantic waters into the
Norwegian Sea and spent three seasons in the Antarctic working on oceanographic
and glaciological studies of the International Geophysical Year.

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March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03

IMMEDIATE

The State University of New York at Albany Concert Band will perform in concert
for the benefit of underprivileged children of the Capital District, Friday and
Saturday, March 13 and 14, in the main theatre of the university's Performing
Arts Center. There will be no admission charge for the 8:30 p.m. concert, but
donations will be accepted.

In addition to the Concert Band, conducted by William Hudson, participants will
include the Statesmen, directed by Karl Peterson, the University Percussion
Ensemble, conducted by Thomas Brown, and the following guest performers:
Findlay Cockrell, piano; Marjory Fuller, soprano; Irvin Gilman, flute; Dennis
Helmrich, piano; Vincent LaFleur, trombone; Ruth McKee, bassoon; soloists
from the University Singers, and the Drama Department Dancers.

Featuring the program will be selections from Hair, The Sound of Music,

Carousel, West Side Story, and My Fair Lady. Also included will be works

by Sadel-Tucci, Rimsky-Korsakov, Handel, Chopen, Sousa, Milhaud, Arensky,

Hutchinson, and Orff,

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March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
‘ } STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
a H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Adwcaie a geeol- Wh oa
IMMEDI ATE

The New York State Departments of Health and Education will co-sponsor a Capital
Area Conference on the Prevention of Heart Disease, Tuesday, March 10, in the Campus
Center Assembly Hall, State University of New York at Albany. Representatives from
some 60-70 school districts in the counties of Albany, Schenectady, Rensselaer, Sara-
toga, Schoharie, Warren, and Whitehall have been invited to attend.

The aim of the conference will be to urge the school districts to establish anti-coronary
programs for adults in the 40-60 age group in their communities, Main speakers will be
Dr. Wilhelm Raab, professor emeritus at the University of Vermont, College of Medicine,
and Dr. George Christakis, associate dean, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Dr. Raab,

a cardiologist, will speak on ''Heart Disease: Number One Killer." He is a native of
Austria and has been described as ''a gadfly to the sedentary American male," urging him
to stop smoking, exercise more, and trim his waistline. He has published four books and
more than 200 articles in the cardiovascular field.

Dr. Christakis' address will concern "Nutrition Education in Heart Disease." He
formerly served as director of the Bureau of Nutrition, New York City Health Department,
and was research director of an anti-coronary club study project involving some 900 men,

40-59 years old,

Robert Carty and Clifton Taft will discuss successful anti-coronary programs in their
respective communities of Glens Falls and Whitehall, while Ewald Nyquist, State Com-
missioner of Education, and Hollis Ingraham, Commissioner of Health, will greet the
conferees, Other highlights of the program include individual group sessions; display of
charts showing heart attacks among various age groups in the seven counties by Dr. Nich-

olas Alexiou, associate director, Division of Preventive Services, Health Department;
and a controlled fat diet luncheon,

The conference will begin at 8:30 with State Health Department technicians on hand to
give examinations such as blood tests, cardiograms, and other tests for possible heart
disease.

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March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President \\

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03
IMMEDIATE

William Y, Adams, associate professor of anthropology, University of
Kentucky, will speak in the Campus Center assembly hall, State University of
New York at Albany, 8 o'clock Tuesday evening, March 17. His address is
sponsored by the Albany Area Society of the Archaeological Institute of America.

Professor Adams will discuss ''The Archaeological Salvage Campaign in
Sudanese Nubia.'' He formerly was UNESED liaison officer and field director of
Nubian Operations, Sudan Antiquities Service and field director Glen Canyon
Salvage Program, Museum of Northern Arizona (Flagstaff).

He has done ethnological field work among Navajo, Hopi, and Apache Indians
in California, Arizona, and Utah, and since 1959 has participated in archaeological
excavations in Nubia. Professor Adams has published studies on the role of the
trader in a modern Mavajo community, and numerous articles on Nubian and

Egyptian archaeology.

SRA IRI

March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
| - STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

| Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901" 02 = 03

Immediate

The Experimental Theatre and Music Council of State
University of New York at Albany will present the msical,
"The Roar of the Greasepaint--The Smell of the Crowd", in
the Arena Theatre, Performing Arts Center, Thursday*and

Friday*evenings. Performances will be at 7:30 and at 9.

In the cast of the Leslie Bricusse-Anthony Newley

musical are Michael Reynolds and Mary Eileen O'Donnell.

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March 19, 20

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
z STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
: H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
IMMEDI ATE

State University of New York at Albany will host a national
institute for 75 persons involved in curriculum changes in Adult
Basic Education (ABE) from July 19 to August 8.

The institute is funded for $112,000, through the U. S. Office of
Education and is intended for ABE programs specializing in disadvantaged
adults in urban centers.

The institute is under the leadership of Dr. John A. Ether, professor
of curriculum education, and Anthony Pacelli, university resource
specialist in ABE, It is the fourth annual institute at Albany specializing

in Adult Basic Education,

SOR RR K

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

a Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
IMMEDI ATE

Jack J. Bulloff, professor in the department of history and systematics
of science, State University of New York at Albany, has been nominated for
first vice-president of the Technical Association of the Graphic Arts (TAGA),
TAGA is the basic research organization of the $30 billion-a-year eraphic
arts industry which includes the printing and publishing industry as one of its
parts.

Dr. Bulloff has presented many papers at annual meetings of TAGA and
publishes regularly in the annual TAGA Proceedings. His paper "Tutorial
Bibliographies-V-Photophysics for the Graphic Arts'' was published in the
1969 TAGA Proceedings. The next paper in the well-known series of tutorial
bibliographies for advanced research workers in graphic arts laboratories
will be "Tutorial Bibliographies-VI -Forecasting and R&D Planning." It will
be read at the 1970 TAGA Conference, May 4-6, Sheraton-Boston Hotel,
Boston, Mass. .

Dr. Bulloff is the author of ''Printing and the Graphic Arts," which will
appear as Chapter 20 of Dr. Kenneth J, Lissant's ''Emulsions and Emulsion
Technology," Mawes! Dekker Publ., New York, 1970.

His next paper in the graphic arts will be presented to the Society of
Photographic Scientists and Engineers at the Seminar on Applications of Photo-
polymers at Cherry Hill, N.Y., next month. The paper will cover ''Photopolymers
and Printing: Towards 2000 A,D.", and will be given as an introduction to the

session on printing which Dr. Bulloff also will lead.

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March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
=
ae a STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
a | H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
IMMEDIATE

A chamber music concert will be presented Sunday afternoon,
March 22, in the Main Theatre, Performing Arts Center, State University
of New York ai Albany, The concert, which will begin at 3 o'clock, is
one in the music department faculty series.

Featured in the program will be MarjoryFuller, soprano; Irvin
Gilman, flute; Dennis Helmrich, piano; William Hudson, clarinet; Ruth
McKee, bassoon; and Daniel Nimetz, french horn, All are members of the
SUNYA music department faculty.

Works by Hermann Regner, Schubert, Beethoven, and Rimsky-Korsakov

will be included in the concert,

FRR I

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the-President

SU NAAN N i Wi
a Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 ® 02 « 03

IMMEDIATE
The Capital Area Schoo] Development Association (CASDA), State
University of New York at Albany, and the New York State Association of
Elementary School Principals (NYSAESP), Eastern Zone, will sponsor
“What's in It for Me?", at Brubacher Hall, SUNYA downtown campus, Tuesday,
March 24. The program will include discussion in three areas of concern to

1

school administrators; ''Negotiations," "Legislation," and ''The Principal
Communicating to his Publics."

Much of the day will be devoted to reaction and interaction in small
group work. Among those persons responsible for the discussions will be
Michael DeCerbo, legislative committee chairman, NYSAESP; Francis More-
house, legislative committee chairman, NYSAESP; Harvey Nelson, and Doug
Vonie, negotiations committee chairmen, NYSAESP Eastern Zone; Dr. Dale
Bellino, principal Great Plan School, Oneonta; Alan Osterhoudt, educational
administration doctoral program, SUNY; Frank Cleary, principal Irving
School, Catskill; John Lewis, educational administration doctoral program,
SUNY; Ray Colluciello, principal Sacandaga School, Scotia; Tom Wiley,
educational administration doctoral program, SUNY; Frank O'Toole, principal
Big Cross School, Glens Falls; Nicholas DeLuca, educational administration
doctoral program, SUNY,

The program will begin at 9 a.m. with registration and coffee,

followed by remarks from Cal Francisco, chairman, NYSAESP, Eastern
Zone; and Bud Miller, president, NYSAESP.

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March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03
IMMEDIATE

Thomas Brown, lecturer in music, State University of New York at Albany,
has received the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers ( ASCAP)
Popular Award. The ASCAP cash award was given by the Society in recognition
of numerous performed works both nationally and internationally.

Mr. Brown recently published a collection of five books, "Drum Fun," with
Almitra Publishing Co., Inc., to be used throughout the U. S. in public schools.

Previously, he published another series of five method books for classroom
instruction with Kendor Music, Inc,

Crest Records, Inc. has recently released a single long playing Clinician
Series album, in which Mr. Brown discusses and demonstrates rhythm sections,
The album is from a music workshop presented at Syracuse University last summer
for the New York State Music Educators. As national clinician for the Ludwig Drum
Co., he presented music clinics at Millikin University, State University at Delhi, the
University of Connecticut, and the Music Educators National Conference in
Washington, D.C.

The musician was recently elected President of the National Percussive Arts
Society for New York State and President of the National Association of Jazz
Educators for New York State.

SAORI

March 17, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Ss §

e "Bag STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

| we H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901» 02 = 03

IMMEDIATE

The College Stores Association of New York State will hold its
second annual meeting March 24-26 at the Hyatt House, across from the
State University of New York at Albany campus. Some 100 bookstore
managers will exchange ideas, view new products, and hold workshops
with the intent to improve their bookstores,

The meeting will be headed by association president Sid Waldman from
Syracuse University. The other officers are Elinor Wilson, vice president ,
Mohawk Valley Community College; and secretary-treasure Stan Clark, SUNY
College at Cortland.

Among topics for discussion are advertising, public relations, store
display, personnel relations, shoplifting, inventory systems, and better forms
and procedures. Robert Dinovo, manager of the SUNYA bookstore, will conduct
a guided tour of the Albany campus.

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March 17, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
, j STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
: H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS © Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03
IMMEDIATE

Faculty and students of the music department, State University of
New York at Albany, will present a concert of chamber music Friday
evening, March 20, in the Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center, SUNYA,
The program will begin at 8:30.

Participants will be Bonnie Brooks, french horn; Findlay Cockrell, piano;
Irvin Gilman, flute; Patricia Ivanuska, piano; Dennis Helmrich, piano;
William Hudson, clarinet; Vincent LaFleur, trombone; Jeffrey Levine,
clarinet; Ruth McKee, bassoon; James Morris, trumpet; Daniel Nimetz,
french horn; and Debra Swinger, flute.

Among the works presented will be compositions by C.P .E. Bach,
Schubert, Boris Blacher, and Mozart.

SRR

March 17, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
§
A STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 ¥ 02 » 03
IMMEDIATE

The Hudson-Mohawk Training Directors Society and ihe New York State Industrial
Training Council, in cooperation with the College of General Studies, State University
of New York at Albany, will sponsor ''The Education and Training of Minority Group
Members," March 31 at the SUNYA Campus Center, The annual conference will place
special emphasis on what must be done in the future, in addition to examining past and
present efforts,

Keynote speakers will be Paul Miwa, SUNYA assistant vice-president for academic
affairs; Lawrence Burwell, director of the Albany chapter of the Urban League; and Rob-
ert McClelland, director of training for Eastman Kodak Co, They will speak following a
9 a.m. registration and a welcoming address by conference chairman Ersa Poston, pres-
ident, Civil Service Commission, NYS Department of CivilService.

Thereafter, the conference will divide into three concurrent panel sessions concerning
education and training of minority groups in the academic community, in the public sector,
and in the private sector. Dr. Miwa will chair the academic panel, whose members will be
John Reavis, coordinator of special programs, SUNY; Michael VanRyn, chief, Bureau of
In-Service Education, Department of Education; and Garrison G, Gebler, director,
vocational education, Albany School System.

Chairman of the panel on public sector will be Herbert Engel, director, Public
Employee Training, NYS Department of Civil Service. Panel members will be Mr.
Burwell, John Sterrett, career opportunities coordinator, NYS Department of Civil
Service; and Thomas Cowell, director, project WELD, Division of Employment, Depart-
ment of Labor. Thomas Paolucci, director of Labor Department Training, NYS Depart-
ment of Labor, is chairman of the private sector panel, Members include Mr. McClelland,
Donald Grabowski, director, Office of Manpower, Division of Employment, Department of
Labor; and Grace Ellis, training administrator, Loral Electronic Systems.

The luncheon speaker will be M, P. Catherwood, industrial commissioner,
NYS Department of Labor,

dR IARC

March 19, 1970
1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
iy 5A f STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
| wi H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Si der en COMME eee Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
Area Code 518 457-4901." 02 »
mae’ oT MED TA

Summer workshops in business education, English, and economics have been approved
by the New York State Education Department for the State University of New York at Albany.
Dr. Ralph Tibbetts, professor of education and chairman of teacher education programs,
is liaison officer for the three werkshops.

The thirty to forty teachers enrolled in the business education course, "Workshop in

Modern Bookkeeping and Accounting Systems,"

will receive either a maintenance allow-
ance for residents of $120, or a commutation allowance for non-residents of $20; plus
tuition and fees. The workshop is tentatively set for August 17-28, with a maximum
instructional cost of $3936,72, Charles F. Petitjean, professor of administrative
services, will serve as director and instructor. The program will be funded under the
Vocational Education Act of 1963, amended in 1968.

"The Development of Creative Teaching Techniques Correlating Cinema, Drama and
Literature for the Secondary English Teacher" is the course to be given to thirty to
forty participants between July 6 and August 7, The maximum instructional cost for the
program is $10, 000, plus tuition and fees for teachers, a $300 per teacher maintenance
allowance for residents, and a $50 allowance for commuters. William C. Kraus, assoc-
iate professor of edw ation (English), will direct the program.

The economics workshop is open to up to thirty teachers and will take place June 29
to August 14, The course, "Institute on Contemporary Socio-Economic Problems," will
be directed by Louis R. Salkever, chairman of the economics department. Cost per
teacher will include $166.80 for tuition and fees, $420 for maintenance of residents, and

$70 commutation allowance for non-residents. The maximum instructional cost for this

program has not yet been set,

March 19, 1970 ae

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
a ‘ STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03
IMMEDI ATE

The department of educational psychology, State University of New York at
Albany, will host a conversation in the discipline on the topic ''Models and Methods
in Research on Compensatory Education, '' April 9 and 10, The conference is
supported by the New York State Education Department and the Committee on Uni-
versity Faculty Programs of SUNY. Sessions will be held in the SUNYA Campus
Center Ballroom,

A number of educational scientists with special academic qualifications to present
and contrast standard models of compensatory education will be brought together for
the conversation. Discussions will be oriented toward a delineation of models and
aspects of models which appear to hold special potential for future work.

Among the scheduled participants are Edmund Gordan, Teachers College, Columbia
University; Irving Sigel, SUNY Buffalo; Carl Bereiter, Ontario Institute for Studies in
Education; Clyde Noble, University of Georgia; James Kuethe, professor of educational
psychology, SUNYA; Robert Pruzek, associate professor of educational psychology and
statistics, SUNYA; and J. M. Stephens, professor emeritus, John Hopkins University.

Persons interested in registering for the conference should contact Mrs. O.
Durgerian, education building room 232, SUNYA, 1400 Washington Avenue, Albany
New York 12203 (518-457-8234),

SHOR RRK

March 19, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
% 5
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFF 0 . .
ICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code $48 mS Vat pyd * 02 + 03

An interdisciplinary ''Conversation in the Disciplines" entitled Philosophy and the
Disciplines" will be held March 26-28 at the Gideon Putnam Hotel, Saratoga Springs.

It is sponsored by State University of New York with the participation of the Metaphil-
osophy Foundation, and all faculty and students of SUNY are welcome to attend.

William L. Reese, professor of philosophy, SUNYA, is hosting the conversation
under a $2,000 grant from the SUNY Research Foundation, SUNY Chancellor Samuel B,
Gould and SUNYA acting president Allan A, Kuusisto, will address the conference.

Approximately 200 delegates are being invited including three from each college
and university center in the SUNYA system.

Because the theme of the conference is the relationship of philosophy to the other
disciplines, delegates will include representatives of the social and natural sciences as

vell as of the humanities,

The first session will deal with a general discussion of how the disciplines emerged
and separated from each other, Subsequent discussion sessions will examine the appro-
priate role that philosophy might play in relation to the natural sciences, the social
sciences and the humanities,

Resource personnel, who will set the framework for discussion, include Henry D,
Aiken, Brandeis University; Rom Harre, Oxford University; Richard P. McKeon, Univer-
sity of Chicago; Michael Scriven, University of California at Berkeley; Stephan Korner,
University of Bristol; O. William Perlmutter, SUNYA; and Susan Sontag, essayist
and critic.
aK

farch 19, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
SUNYVA NEWS

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS

esa 24, OTS

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

Area Code 518 457-4901» 02 * 03

(MMEDILATIC

‘3S are invited to varé.

3 CON WOU 1 Lassen ten

PASLANMGOMGAL Musi

to dil srences: un pore

Pek Mal wee OF us

euu Jette

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03

IMMEDIATE

Carl L. Klein, assistant secretary jor water quality and research,
Department of the Interior, will speak ai 8 o'clock, Monday evening, March 30

in lecture hali 18, State Univer

ity of New York at Albany, The address is one

' sponsored by the Capital District

Council on Graduate Education in the Biological Sciences,

My

Mr, Klein will speak on "The Programs of the Nixon Administration for

1

Cleaning Up the Environment." Dr. Vincent J. Schaefer, director of the Atmos-

pheric Sciences Research Center, SUNYA, will open the series Wednesday evening,

March 25, with an 8 o'clock address at Union College. Other speeches are

scheduled at Albany Medical College, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and

the General Electric Research and Dev

ypment Center.

The final program will be held in ‘A's lecture hall 18 at 8p.m.,
May 27, The speaker on that date will be David Sive, legal counsel to the

Sierra Club,

March 24, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
q STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
uu & H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03

IMMEDIATE
William &, Adams, associate professor of anthropology, University of
Kentucky, will speak in the Campus Center assembly hall, State University of
New York at Albany, 8 o'clock Tuesday evening, March 17. His address is
sponsored by the Albany Area Society of the Archaeological Institute of America.
Professor Adams will discuss ''The Archaeological Salvage Campaign in

Sudanese Nubia."

He formerly was Unesco liason officer and field director of
Nubian Operations, Sudan Antiquities Service and field director Glen Canyon
Salvage Program, Museum of Northern Arizona (Flagstaff).

He has done ethnological field work among Navajo, Hopi, and Apache Indians
in California, Arizona, and Utah, and since 1959 has participated in archaeological
excavations in Nubia. Professor Adams has published studies on the role of the

trader in a modern Mavajo community, and numerous articles on Nubian and

Egyptian archaeology.

PK

March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
al a STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
i H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03

IMMEDI ATE

The New York State Departments of Health and Education will co-sponsor a Capital
Area Conference on the Prevention of Heart Disease, Tuesday, March 10, in the Campus
Center Assembly Hall, State University of New York at Albany. Representatives from
some 60-70 school districts in the counties of Albany, Schenectady, Rensselaer, Sara~
toga, Schoharie, Warren, and Whitehall have been invited to attend.

The aim of the conference will be to urge the school districts to establish anti-coronary
programs for adults in the 40-60 age group in their communities, Main speakers will be
Dr. Wilhelm Raab, professor emeritus at the University of Vermont, College of Medicine,
and Dr. George Christakis, associate dean, Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Dr, Raab,

a cardiologist, will speak on ''Heart Disease: Number One Killer." He is a native of
Austria and has been described as "a gadfly to the sedentary American male," urging him
to stop smoking, exercise more, and trim his waistline. He has published four books and
more than 200 articles in the cardiovascular field.

Dr, Christakis' address will concern "Nutrition Education in Heart Disease.'' He
formerly served as director of the Bureau of Nutrition, New York City Health Department,
and was research director of an anti-coronary club study project involving some 900 men,
40-59 years old.

Robert Carty and Clifton Taft will discuss successful anti-coronaryp rograms in their
respective communities of Glens Falls and Whitehall, while Ewald Nyquist, State Com-
missioner of Education, and Hollis Ingraham, Commissioner of Health, will greet the
conferees, Other highlights of the program include individual group sessions; display of
charts showing heart attacks among various age groups in the seven counties by Dr. Nich-
olas Alexiou, associate director, Division of Preventive Services, Health Department;
and a controlled fat diet luncheon.

The conference will begin at 8:30 with State Health Department technicians on hand to
give examinations such as blood tests, cardiograms, and other tests for possible heart
disease.

eK

March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
i] STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
Wi H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 ® 02 * 03
IMMEDIATE

The State University of New York at Albany Concert Band will perform in concert
for the benefit of underprivileged children of the Capital District, Friday and
Saturday, March 13 and 14, in the main theatre of the university's Performing
Arts Center. There will be no admission charge for the 8:30 p.m. concert, but
donations will be accepted.

In addition to the Concert Band, conducted by William Hudson, participants will
include the Statesmen, directed by Karl Peterson, the University Percussion
Ensemble, conducted by Thomas Brown, and the following guest performers:
Findlay Cockrell, piano; Marjory Fuller, soprano; Irvin Gilman, flute; Dennis
Helmrich, piano; Vincent LaFleur, trombone; Ruth McKee, bassoon; soloists
from the University Singers, and the Drama Department Dancers,

Featuring the program will be selections from Hair, The Sound of Music,

Carousel, West Side Story, and My Fair Lady. Also included will be works

by Sadel-Tucci, Rimsky-Korsakov, Handel, Chopen, Sousa, Milhaud, Arensky,

Hutchinson, and Orff,

oR

March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
‘ t STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03
IMMEDI ATE

Stephen O. Wilson, instructor of geography, State University of New York
at Albany, has been awarded a $14, 230 Science Faculty Fellowship for the next
full year by the National Science Foundation (NSF). He will be working at
Clark University, Worcester, Mass., and in the Lake George basin on the develop-
ment of measurement techniques for estimating man's role in lake eutrophication
processes,

Eutrophication concerns the process of aging, specifically, of a body of
water. Mr. Wilson will be conducting a social science survey and estimating
the total amount of man-made products, such as insecticides, detergents, and
fertilizers, being brought to, and consumed in, the Lake George basin.

Two years ago the geographer received a Research Participation Grant
from NSF for the study of aspects of the ecology of Lake George. The basin
has been designated as a focal point for ecological research by the International
Biological Program,

Mr. Wilson joined the SUNYA staff in 1966, He previously worked with the
Woods Hole OCLs Institution on transport of Atlantic waters into the
Norwegian Sea and spent three seasons in the Antarctic working on oceanographic
and glaciological studies of the International Geophysical Year,

sek

March 6, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
=
2 Vag STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
| vy H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
IMMEDI ATE

State University of New York at Albany will host a national
institute for 75 persons involved in curriculum changes in Adult
Basic Education (ABE) from July 19 to August 8.

The institute is funded for $112,000, through the U. S. Office of
Education and is intended for ABE programs specializing in disadvantaged
adults in urban centers.

The institute is under the leadership of Dr. John A. Ether, professor
of curriculum education, and Anthony Pacelli, university resource
specialist in ABE, It is the fourth annual institute at Albany specializing

in Adult Basic Education.

sR

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

S \ a Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03
IMMEDI ATE

Jack J. Bulloff, professor in the department of history and systematics
of science, State University of New York at Albany, has been nominated for
first vice-president of the Technical Association of the Graphic Arts (TAGA),
TAGA is the basic research organization of the $30 billion-a-year Brapris
arts industry which includes the printing and publishing industry as one of its
parts.

Dr. Bulloff has presented many papers at annual meetings of TAGA and
publishes regularly in the annual TAGA Proceedings. His paper "Tutorial
Bibliographies-V-Photophysics for the Graphic Arts" was published in the
1969 TAGA Proceedings. The next paper in the well-known series of tutorial
bibliographies for advanced research workers in graphic arts laboratories
will be 'Tutorial Bibliographies-VI -Forecasting and R&D Planning." It will
be read at the 1970 TAGA Conference, May 4-6, Sheraton-Boston Hotel,
Boston, Mass,

Dr. Bulloff is the author of Printing and the Graphic Arts," which will
appear as Chapter 20 of Dr, Kenneth J. Lissant's "Emulsions and Emulsion
Technology," Marcel Dekker Publ., New York, 1970,

His next paper in the graphic arts will be presented to the Society of
Photographic Scientists and Engineers at the Seminar on Applications of Photo-
polymers at Cherry Hill, N.Y., next month. The paper will cover ''Photopolymers
and Printing: Towards 2000 A,D.", and will be given as an introduction to the

session on printing which Dr. Bulloff also will lead.

dea

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
g a
ad Wag STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
ve H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03
IMMEDIATE

A chamber music concert will be presented Sunday afternoon,

March 22, in the ee Theatre, Performing Arts Center, State University
of New York at Albany. The concert, which will begin at 3 o'clock, is
one in the music department faculty series.

Featured in the program will be MarjoryFuller, soprano; Irvin
Gilman, flute; Dennis Helmrich, piano; William Hudson, clarinet; Ruth
McKee, bassoon; and Daniel Nimetz, french horn. All are members of the
SUNYA music department faculty.

Works by Hermann Regner, Schubert, Beethoven, and Rimsky-Korsakov

will be included in the concert.

ROR HK

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the-President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03

IMMEDIATE

The Capital Area School Development Association (CASDA), State
University of New York at Albany, and the New York State Association of
Elementary School Principals (NYSAESP), Eastern Zone, will sponsor
"What's in It for Me?", at Brubacher Hall, SUNYA downtown campus, Tuesday,
March 24, The program will include discussion in three areas of concern to
school administrators; ''Negotiations,'' Legislation," and The Principal
Communicating to his Publics."

Much of the day will be devoted to reaction and interaction in small
group work. Among those persons responsible for the discussions will be
Michael DeCerbo, legislative committee chairman, NYSAESP; Francis More-
house, legislative committee chairman, NYSAESP; Harvey Nelson, and Doug
Vonie, negotiations committee chairmen, NYSAESP Eastern Zone; Dr. Dale
Bellino, principal Great Plan School, Oneonta; Alan Osterhoudt, educational
administration doctoral program, SUNY; Frank Cleary, principal Irving
School, Catskill; John Lewis, educational administration doctoral program,
SUNY; Ray Colluciello, principal Sacandaga School, Scotia; Tom Wiley,
educational administration doctoral program, SUNY; Frank O'Toole, principal
Big Cross School, Glens Falls; Nicholas DeLuca, educational administration
doctoral program, SUNY.

The program will begin at 9 a.m. with registration and coffee,

followed by remarks from Cal Francisco, chairman, NYSAESP, Eastern
Zone; and Bud Miller, president, NYSAESP.

Rede es tok

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE,, ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
ae STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03

Immediate

, The Experimental Theatre and Music Council of State
University of New York at Albany will present the musical,
“The Roar of the Greasepaint--The Smell of the Crowd", in
the Arena Theatre, Performing Arts Center, Thursday*and
Friday*evenings. Performances will be at 7:30 and at 9.

In the cast of the Leslie Bricusse-Anthony Newley

musical are Michael Reynolds and Mary Eileen O'Donnell.

*March 19, 20

March 11, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code R18 mS VAfPgd * 02 * 03

An interdisciplinary ‘Conversation in the Disciplines" entitled ''Philosophy and the
Disciplines'' will be held March 26-28 at the Gideon Putnam Hotel, Saratoga Springs.

It is sponsored by State University of New York with the participation of the Metaphil-
osophy Foundation, and all faculty and students of SUNY are welcome to attend.

William L. Reese, professor of philosophy, SUNYA, is hosting the conversation
under a $2,000 grant from the SUNY Research Foundation, SUNY Chancellor Samuel B,
Gould and SUNYA acting president Allan A, Kuusisto, will address the conference.

Approximately 200 delegates are being invited including three from each college
and university center in the SUNYA system.

Because the theme of the conference is the relationship of philosophy to the other
disciplines, delegates will include representatives of the social and natural sciences as
well as of the humanities.

The first session will deal with a general discussion of how the disciplines emerged
and separated from each other. Subsequent discussion sessions will examine the appro-
priate role that philosophy might play in relation to the natural sciences, the social
sciences and the humanities.

Resource personnel, who will set the framework for discussion, include Henry D,
Aiken, Brandeis University; Rom Harre, Oxford University; Richard P. McKeon, Univer-
sity of Chicago; Michael Scriven, University of California at Berkeley; Stephan Korner,
University of Bristol; O, William Perlmutter, SUNYA; and Susan Sontag, essayist
and critic,

eK

March 19, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03
IMMEDIATE

The department of educational psychology, State University of New York at
Albany, will host a conversation in the discipline on the topic "Models and Methods
in Research on Compensatory Education, '' April 9 and 10. The conference is
supported by the New York State Education Department and the Committee on Uni-
versity Faculty Programs of SUNY. Sessions will be held in the SUNYA Campus
Center Ballroom,

A number of educational scientists with special academic qualifications to present
and contrast standard models of compensatory education will be brought together for
the conversation. Discussions will be oriented toward a delineation of models and
aspects of models which appear to hold special potential for future work,

Among the scheduled participants are Edmund Gordan, Teachers College, Columbia
University; Irving Sigel, SUNY Buffalo; Carl Bereiter, Ontario Institute for Studies in
Education; Clyde Noble, University of Georgia; James Kuethe, professor of educational
psychology, SUNYA; Robert Pruzek, associate professor of educational psychology and
statistics, SUNYA; and J, M. Stephens, professor emeritus, John Hopkins University.

Persons interested in registering for the conference should contact Mrs. O.
Durgerian, education building room 232, SUNYA, 1400 Washington Avenue, Albany
New York 12203 (518-457-8234),

SSR

March 19, 1970

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
aaah
Fy = STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
| wl H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
OrHCRc AE COMMUARTREENS Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
Area Code 518 457-4901 # .
MMEDIATE

Summer workshops in business education, English, and economics have been approved
by the New York State Education Department for the State University of New York at Albany.
Dr. Ralbh Tibbetts, professor of education and eieieren of teacher education programs,
is liaison officer for the three werkshops.

The thirty to forty teachers enrolled in the business education course, "Workshop in

Modern Bookkeeping and Accounting Systems, "'

will receive either a maintenance allow-
ance for residents of $120, or a commutation allowance for non-residents of $20; plus
tuition and fees. The workshop is tentatively set for August 17-28, with a maximum
instructional cost of $3936,72. Charles F. Petitjean, professor of administrative
services, will serve as director and instructor. The program will be funded under the
Vocational Education Act of 1963, amended in 1968.

"The Development of Creative Teaching Techniques Correlating Cinema, Drama and
Literature for the Secondary English Teacher" is the course to be given to thirty to
forty participants between July 6 and August 7. The maximum instructional cost for the
program is $10,000, plus tuition and fees for teachers, a $300 per teacher maintenance
allowance for residents, and a $50 allowance for commuters. William C. Kraus, assoc-
iate professor of education (English), will direct the program.

The economics workshop is open to up to thirty teachers and will take place June 29
to August 14, The course, ''Institute on Contemporary Socio-Economic Problems," will
be directed by Louis R. Salkever, chairman of the economics department. Cost per
teacher will include $166.80 for tuition and fees, $420 for maintenance of residents, and

$70 commutation allowance for non-residents. The maximum instructional cost for this

program has not yet been set.

March 19, 1970 eI

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
: STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 # 02 # 03
IMMEDIATE

The Hudson-Mohawk Training Directors Society and the New York State Industrial
Training Council, in cooperation with the College of General Studies, State University
of New York at Albany, will sponsor ''The Education and Training of Minority Group
Members,"' March 31 at the SUNYA Campus Center. The annual conference will place
special emphasis on what must be done in the future, in addition to examining past and
present efforts.

Keynote speakers will be Paul Miwa, SUNYA assistant vice-president for academic
affairs; Lawrence Burwell, director of the Albany chapter of the Urban League; and Rob-
ert McClelland, director of training for Eastman Kodak Co, They will speak following a
9 a.m. registration and a welcoming address by conference chairman Ersa Poston, pres-
ident, Civil Service Commission, NYS Department of CivilService,

Thereafter, the conference will divide into three concurrent panel sessions concerning
education and training of minority groups in the academic community, in the public sector,
and in the private sector. Dr. Miwa will chair the academic panel, whose members will be
John Reavis, coordinator of special programs, SUNY; Michael VanRyn, chief, Bureau of
In-Service Education, Department of Education; and Garrison G, Gebler, director,
vocational education, Albany School System.

Chairman of the panel on public sector will be Herbert Engel, director, Public
Employee Training, NYS Department of Civil Service. Panel members will be Mr.
Burwell, John Sterrett, career opportunities coordinator, NYS Department of Civil
Service; and Thomas Cowell, director, project WELD, Division of Employment, Depart-
ment of Labor. Thomas Paolucci, director of Labor Department Training, NYS Depart-
ment of Labor, is chairman of the private sector panel, Members include Mr. McClelland,
Donald Grabowski, director, Office of Manpower, Division of Employment, Department of
Labor; and Grace Ellis, training administrator, Loral Electronic Systems.

The luncheon speaker will be M. P. Catherwood, industrial commissioner,

NYS Department of Labor.

HE

March 19, 1970
1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEWYORK 12203

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Box 2, Folder 30
Resource Type:
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Rights:
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CC BY 4.0
Date Uploaded:
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