Press Releases, 1973 September

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H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Director, Information Services

STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
Hi E a $ OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS

NOTE TO EDITOR

The following program should have been included in the August 31, 1973

release entitled COCKRELL AFTERNOON CONCERTS, TV BROADCASTS,

AND WORKSHOPS TO BEGIN SEPT, 10 AT SUNYA :

The music of Debussy, 12 preludes for piano (book one) will be
featured on the concert programs on Monday and Tuesday afternoons,
Oct, 8 and 9, at 4. The videotape rebroadcast of the concert will

be on Sunday afternoon, Oct. 14, at a time to be announced, The

date of the workshop on Debussy preludes also will be announced

later,

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September 6, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12208 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 © 03
State University of New York at Albany

Department of Chemistry

Organic Seminar
Chemistry 681

Professor Teddy G. Traylor

Department of Chemistry
University of California
San Diego

speaking on

ASPECTS OF SIGMA-PI CONJUGATION

Tuesday, September 11, 1973

4:15 p.m.

Chemistry Reading Room (151)

All interested are cordially invited to attend.
State University of New York at Albany

Department of Chemistry

Organic Seminar
Chemistry 681

PROFESSOR STEPHEN S. HIXSON
Department of Chemistry

University of Massaxhusetts

speaking on

Arylcyclopropane Photochemistry

Tuesday, September 18, 1973
4:15 p.m.

Chemistry Reading Room (151)

All interested are cordially invited to attend.
35-73

NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

ACCOUNTING PROFESSOR AT SUNYA HEADS INTERNATIONAL
FRATERNITY

Harold L. Cannon of State University of New York at
Albany has been elected grand president of the International
Fraternity of Delta Sigma Pi. The election took place at the
fraternity's biennial convention at Protsmouth, N.H. Delta
Sigma Pi is a professional fraternity in business administration
with 146 chapters throughout the United States and Mexico.

Dr. Cannon, an associate professor and coordinator of
accounting at SUNYA, is the first educator to be elected grand
president of the fraternity since its founding in 1907, His term
of office is for two years.

Dr. Cannon resides in Loudonville.

ok 2K 3k ok ok OK

Sept. 12, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 « 02 « 03
MEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

ACADEMIC DISCIPLINES SUBJECT OF SUNYA PROGRAM

"Conversations in the Disciplines", a discussion of alternative
models for a school of education encompassing studies in history,
philosophy, and sociology, will be hosted Oct, 4-5 at State University
of New York at Albany by the university's department of foundations
of education.

At the opening session the keynote address will be given by
Professor Harry 8. Broudy of the University of Illinois at 10 a.m.
in the Campus Center Assembly Hall, In the afternoon Professor
Hyman Kuritz of SUNYA, seminar leader, will chair a session on
history. Also participating will be Professor David Potts of Union
College.

On Friday, Oct. 3, Professor James E. McClellan, Jr., of
SUNYA, will be the seminar leader for commentary and discussion
of philosophy, Participating with him will be Professor M. Berger,
also of SUNYA. The afternoon session will be devoted to sociology.
Professor Gerald Levy, of Columbia University, will be the seminar
leader. Other participants will include Professors Francis X,

Femminella and Paul Meadows of SUNYA.
Professor Berger will give the summary and appreciation at
the conclusion of the two-day program which is funded by SUNY's

"Conversations in the Disciplines".
OK KK KK

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 1222: * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
Sept. 3) arg 7 e2ee

37-73
36-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS SUBJECT OF SEMINAR AT SUNYA

The Continuing Seminar on Management Information Systems
of the American Management Association will hold its quarterly
meeting at the Campus Center of State University of New York at
Albany on Wednesday and Thursday Sept. 19 and 20. The meeting
will be chaired by Donald Axelrod, chairman of the public adminis-
tration department of the Graduate School of Public Affairs at SUNYA
and Lee J. Pratt, director of management information services of
Babcock & Wilcox, Inc.

The program will consist of presentations on state government
management information systems for highway safety and job placement;
computer systems development in bureaucratic environment; and the
applicability of electronic data processing centralization in state
government operations.

There also will be several presentations with regard to private
sector management information systems.

The AMA group is composed of senior executives from large
corporations and governmental agencies with primary responsibility
for systems development.

2k OR oR oe ok

Sept. 12, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
40-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

CITY CENTER ACTING COMPANY AT SUNYA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER

The City Center Acting Company will perform Anton Chekhov's ''The Three
Sisters, '' Thursday, Sept. 20, John Gay's ''The Beggars' Opera,'' Friday, Sept. 21,
and William Shakespeare's ''Measure for Measure," Saturday, Sept. 22, All
performances will be in the Main Theatre, State University of New York at Albany
Performing Arts Center, 1400 Washington ave., Albany. Tickets at $3 are
available at the box office which is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through
Friday. The telephone number is 457-8606.

"The Beggars! Opera" is the first event of the new university series called
"New Perspectives, '' a subscription series of performing arts events and lectures.

The subscription is $16.50.
Under the direction of John Houseman, many of the acting company are
graduates of the Juilliard Acting Program. This is the company's second season

of national tours after a summer residency at Saratoga Performing Arts Center.

"The Three Sisters" was directed by Boris Tumarini; ''The Beggars' Opera,"

by Gene Lesser; and "Measure for Measure," by John Houseman,

NOTE TO EDITORS
Review tickets (2) are available by calling
the Box Office. The performance schedule
has been changed since the first pre-season
announcement,

Sept. 12, 1973

For information call;
SUNYA Performing Arts Center
Michael T. Sheehan
518-45 7-8608
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
38-73
EWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

HEW COMMISSION MEMBER TO SPEAK AT SUNYA SEMINAR
ON "THE NURSE AND THE LAW"

Helen Creighton, a member of the Medical Malpractice Commission
of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, will be the princi-
pal speaker Saturday, Sept. 22, at a one-day program on ''The Nurse
and The Law" offered by the Department of Continuing Education of
the School of Nursing, State University of New York at Albany. Approxi-
mately 150 persons from a 20 county area are expected to attend.

Dr. Creighton, who has a Master of Science in Nursing and a
Doctor of Jurisprudence, is professor of nursing at the University of
Wisconsin, She is the author of ''Law Every Nurse Should Know" and
of a monthly column on legal aspects of nursing for the publication,
"Supervisor Nurse’. Among her numerous professional affiliations
are the American Nurses Association, the American Bar Association,
the National League for Nursing, and the American Heart Association.

The luncheon speaker will be Helen Burnside. Dr. Burnside is
associate provost for health sciences, State University of New York.

Dean Dorothy Major, of SUNYA's School of Nursing, will preside
at the program to take place from 8:30 a,m. to 3 p.m. in the Campus
Center ballroom. Serving as coordinator is Judith Whitaker, associate
professor for continuing education on the nursing school faculty.

-continued- .

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 © 03
State University of New York at Albany

HEW COMMISSION MEMBER TO SPEAK AT SUNYA SEMINAR
ON "THE NURSE AND THE LAW"

Page 2

Those interested in attending the program may obtain registration
information from Mrs, Whitaker at 1400 Washington avenue, Albany
12222, or by calling her at 457-8654,

2k Ok Ok ok ok

Sept. 12, 1973
39-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

COLUMBIA'S ROTHMAN PINKERTON VISITING PROFESSOR AT SUNYA

David J. Rothman, of the Columbia University faculty, has
become the Robert A. Pinkerton Visiting Professor in Criminal
Justice for 1973-74 at the School of Criminal Justice, State University
of New York at Albany. He is professor of history at Columbia and
also senior research associate at Columbia's Center for Policy Research.

Professor Rothman, who lately has been concerned with a project
on "Incarceration and Its Alternatives in Twentieth-Century America",
has published widely. More recently his writings have included
"Of Prisons, Asylums and Other Decaying Institutions", published in
The Public Interest, and Incarceration: Past and Present", which
appeared in The Humanist.

Two years ago Dr. Rothman won the Beveridge Prize of the
American Historical Association for ''The Discovery of the Asylum",
judged the best English language book in American history, 1971.

The Pinkerton professor holds degrees from Columbia College
and Harvard University. The position at the School of Criminal
Justice is made possible by a three-year grant of $150, 000 from the
Pinkerton Foundation.

HR oe ok ok

Sept. 12, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
42-73
FWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

LEHMAN FELLOWS STUDYING AT SUNYA

Four winners of the prestigious 1973-74 Lehman Fellowships
and two alternates have begun their studies at the School of
Criminal Justice, State University of New York at Albany. The
number of designees indicates that the school was selected by
more Lehman Fellows than any other graduate program in a public
or private university in the state,

Brenda Miller, winner, attended high school in Danvers, Ill.,
and received her bachelor's degree in social work from the Uni-
versity of Illinois in June. She plans to seek placement in the
probation and corrections field upon completion of her studies.

Another winner, Earl Reynolds, attended Lucy Addison High
School in Roanoke, Va., and received his bachelor's degree in
sociology from Fayetteville State University in May. He hopes to
affiliate himself with an agency or office where he can contribute
to finding solutions to growing problems concerning crime and
incarceration and to problems related to a weakening judicial system,

Belinda Rodgers, also a winner, attended West Rome High
School in Georgia and received her bachelor's degree in sociology
from the University of Georgia in June. Her objective is to aid in

-continued-
4400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
State University of New York at Albany
LEHMAN FELLOWS STUDYING AT SUNYA Page 2

the advancement of the criminal justice system toward effective
rehabilitation,

Winner Susan Teer, who attended Broodfield High School in
Connecticut, received her Bachelor of Arts in political science from
Fairfield University in June. Upon completion of her studies in
criminal justice she seeks a career ina related administration field,
She also plans continuing research and the study of innovative programs
for crime prevention.

Alternate winners are Theodore Salem and Joseph Sanborn. The
former, who attended Christopher Columbus High School in New York
and received his B.A, in political science from SUNYA in 1972, will
continue his study in law and judicial systems in the criminal justice
field upon completion of his studies here. Mr. Sanborn, who attended
Devon Preparatory School, Devon, Pa., and received his B.A, in
sociology with a certificate in criminology from Villanova in May,
desires to enter the correctional field and to pursue teaching on a
college level.

The Lehman Fellowships are awarded to students planning to
pursue graduate work in areas of public policy. The awards provide
generous financial assistance to support study in any university in
the state. They are recognized as being among the most important
graduate scholarship programs in the United States. This year 30

awards were made to students who plan to matriculate in New York

graduate schools. Twenty alternates also were selected.

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September 14, 1973
CHEMICAL PHYSICS SEMINAR
(Chem 685A & Physics 685A)

Department of Chemistry

Monday, September 17, 1973
at 7:00 p.m.

by

Professor L. Andrews

Speaking on

Microwave Optics (Demonstration Lecture)

Everyone interested js invited to attend.

41-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

LAURA ROTH, NOTED SCIENTIST, JOINS SUNYA FACULTY

The noted woman scientist, Laura M. Roth, has joined the faculty of
State University of New York at Albany as research professor. Prior to
her new position Dr, Roth was Abby Mauze Rockefeller Visiting Professor
in the department of physics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
She is considered to be one of the world's leading solid state theorists.

Dr. Roth in the past has held positions at a number of universities and
research institutes. Among them are Harvard, Tufts, Lincoln Laboratories
at Masachusetts Institute of Technology, General Electric Research and
Development Center, and the Institute for Theoretical Physics of the Uni-
versity of Colorado,

Dr. Roth was the first woman in the United States to be awarded a
coveted Sloan Foundation Fellowship. She also is the recipient of a medal
for excellence in sustained research and scholarship presented by the
Radcliffe Graduate Alumnae.

The physicist has done classic work on magnetic perturbation of
energy bands. Her work in electron effective masses and g-factors and
on interband magneto-optic spectroscopy in semiconductors has been
recognized internationally and is described as essential to an understanding
of experimental results. More recently Dr. Roth has been involved in

large scale computer calculations concerning quantum chemical modeling

-continued-
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 + 02 » 03
State University of New York at Albany
LAURA ROTH, NOTED SCIENTIST, JOINS SUNYA FACULTY Page 2

of surfaces, She is the author or co-author of numerous papers in professional
journals.
Dr. Roth is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and a member
of Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi.
2 KK ok ok ok

September 14, 1973
NEWS Office of Community Relations “ms

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

NATIONAL GRANT TO SUNYA CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCHOOL
SUPPORTS MODEL CURRICULA

In the last five years more than a thousand programs in the
area of criminal justice have been developed in colleges and uni-
versities in the United States. Few efforts have been undertaken
on a national basis to develop model curricula for such programs,
to explore their inter-relationships with other disciplines, and to
deal with problems of accreditation and state wide planning. In
order to begin to confront the issues, the National Institute of Corrections
and the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration have awarded
an $80, 000 grant to a team of faculty members at the School of
Criminal Justice at State University of New York at Albany to develop
such materials for colleges and universities across the United States
as well as a national strategy for their dissemination,

The first phase of the project was completed recently when 22
instructors in colleges and universities from across the United States
were brought to Albany for a two-week conference, held at the
Institute for Man and Science Campus at Rensselaerville, during
whictra variety of curriculum and organizational issues was reviewed.
Among the topics explored were problems of student transfer between

two-year and four-year schools; core curriculum for police, courts,

-continued-
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
weatc UMLVELBILy UL INCW LOK at Aipany
NATIONAL GRANT TO SUNYA CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCHOOL
SUPPORTS MODEL CURRICULA Page 2

and correctional personnel; and the relationship with other academic
disciplines such as law and psychology. Among the national authorities
presenting materials were Sheldon Messinger, dean of the School of
Criminology, University of California at Berkeley; David Fogel,
director of the Law Enforcement Planning Commission of the State

of Illinois; and David Rothman, historian from Columbia University.

Edward Carr of the New York State Department of Education
reviewed the problems of statewide planning with the participants and
used New York State as a case illustration of the problems that must
be faced in developing programs in criminal justice at the two-year,
four-year, and graduate level. Donald Riddle, president of John Jay
College, discussed plans for an accreditation program and Norval
Jesperson, director of Manpower and Education of the Law Enforcement
Assistance Administration, examined national manpower and higher
education needs as well.

In the next phases of the program, material developed in the
two-week conference will be studied and a series of publications will
be produced. Additionally, a conference will be held in January 1974
in which a nationally selected group of persons will be invited to
develop strategies for the improvement of criminal justice education
in the United States. The materials will be made available to agencies
concerned with higher education in all of the states as well as federal

authorities interested in this area.

-continued-
State University of New York at Albany
NATIONAL GRANT TO SUNYA CRIMINAL JUSTICE SCHOOL

SUPPORTS MODEL CURRICULA Page 3

The program is directed by Vincent O'Leary, acting dean of
the School of Criminal Justice, and his associates, Donald Newman
and Fred Cohen, also of the School of Criminal Justice faculty.

OR KK ok ok

September 14, 1973

EDITORS: A resident of your circulation area who participated
in the conference is included in the attached list.
43-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

DRIVER EDUCATION PROGRAM AT SUNYA

The Traffic Education Program at State University of New
York at Albany has announced the resumption of the three-clock-hour,
non-credit offering entitled ''Prelicensing Instruction In Highway
Safety". The program will be offered on Monday, Oct. 1, and
Monday, Dec, 3, in Lecture Center 15 from 6 p.m. until 9:15 p.m.

To comply with Section 501 of the vehicle and traffic law, the
applicant for a first driver's license must submit proof of having
completed the three-hour program to the Department of Motor
Vehicles before an appointment for a road test can be made,

Registration for the program is limited to those who have a
learner's permit and who enroll either by calling 457-4512 or by
sending a check payable to the Traffic Education Program, SUNYA,
in care of Richard D, Ellis, program director, The registration
fee is $5.

OK KOR KK

September 14, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
48-73

NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

FALL NON-CREDIT COURSES AT SUNYA

Forty -one non-credit courses are being offered during the fall
semester by the College of General Studies of State University of New York
at Albany. The courses, open to all adults, are designed to meet the
educational needs of those men and women who seek challenging and
interesting educational opportunities at the university level but who do
not desire academic credits.

The offerings, beginning in October, include a seminar on human
sexuality, ballet, modern dance, books and book collecting, Ireland
and its literature, reading improvement, radio drama as literature,
repertory band, perspectives on music: the mystery and the magic,
repertory chorus, repertory orchestra, symphonic wind ensemble,
motion picture production techniques, basic television production, basic
photography, cartooning in theory and practice,

Also, lithography, watercolor, batik, painting, Serigraphy, living
crafts of the Indians, figure and portrait painting, independent study:
advanced painting workshop, basic drawing, drawing workshop, etching,
creative design, University Symphony Orchestra, investing during
inflation, Hatha Yoga, ancient wisdom of Yoga and Vedanta: basic

preparation for life, English for speakers of other languages, alternative

-continued-
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
State University of New York at Albany
FALL NON-CREDIT COURSES AT SUNYA Page 2

life styles, introduction to natural foods, natural foods seminar, focus
on your retirement introduction to wines and cheeses,

Detailed information about the courses, which begin in October,
is available from the College of General Studies, SUNYA, Draper Hall,
135 Western avenue, Albany 12203, The telephone number is 472-8494,

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Sept. 19, 1973
46-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations
SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

IMMEDIATE

WALTER PLATE: |'AN EXHILARATING AND RECK LESS PAINTER"
(EXHIBITION DATES AT SUNYA ART GALLERY OCT. 14 THROUGH NOV, 18)

An exhibition of paintings, drawings and collages by the late
Walter Plate of Woodstock, will open at the University Art Gallery,
State University of New York at Albany on Sunday, Oct. 14.

Although it is not intended to be a retrospective exhibition in the
usual sense, the show will include some 60 works from the period
between 1952 and 1972. The Whitney Museum of American Art, the
Nationa] Collection of Fine Arts at the Smithsonian Institution, the
Corcoran Gallery in Washington, and some 20 private collectors have
loaned works to the exhibition.

The School of Architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,
where Walter Plate was professor of art from 1965 until his death in
1972, is collaborating with SUNYA in putting on the show.

The earliest works to be shown stem from the time in the 1950's
when Walter Plate was one of the promising young painters in that group
of American artists who became the focus of world attention. They were
known variously as Abstract Expressionists or Action Painters, After
1960 many of the painters became victims of what the critic Lawrence

Campbell calls a cold war in art". Mr, Campbell, who describes Plate

-continued-

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 © 02 » 03
State University of New York at Albany
WALTER PLATE: "AN EXHILARATING AND RECKLESS PAINTER"

as "an exhilarating and reckless painter, '' has written an introduction
to the catalogue for the exhibition in which he says, ''Walter Plate is
one of those rare people in Art who managed to preserve his own inde-
pendence. It must not be forgotten that the 1950's, however creative
or admirable those years may have been, was also a period of conformity
disguised as liberation. Plate really never conformed at any time."

The forthcoming Walter Plate exhibition, ''a tribute to his solidity
and achievements", tends to show that good painting survives outside
the confusions of ''movements", labels, and fads. It may also cause
the viewing audience to question the obituary notices for Abstract
Expressionism so freely published in the 1960's.

A public reception for the Walter Plate exhibition will be held
in the University Art Gallery on Sunday, Oct. 14 from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m,
The exhibit will continue until Nov. 18 during the gallery's regular hours,
Monday through Friday, 9 p.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturday and Sunday,
lp.m. toSp.m.

JK ok ok ok ok

Sept. 19, 1973

For further information please contact:

Nancy Liddle
457-3375

Page 2
“—
NEWS Office of Community Relations ™

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SU NYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

ESTATE PLANNERS' DAY SEPT. 29 AT SUNYA

The fourth annual Estate Planners' Day, presented by the School
of Business, State University of New York at Albany, and The National
Commercial Bank and Trust Company, will be held on the university
campus Saturday, Sept. 29, for the benefit of attorneys, accountants,
life underwriters, trust officers, college development officers, and
other estate planners of northeastern New York. There are 33 sponsoring
organizations for the program which will begin at 8:55 a.m. in the
Educational Communication Center on the campus with a welcome by
Virginia B. Bowers, vice president and trust officer of The Bank in
the Personal Trust Department and program chairman.

Congressman Samuel S. Stratton is scheduled to be the luncheon
speaker. Other participants include Eugene L. Stoler, New York,
"Elections Available to Executors and Administrators -- When and How
To Make Them"; Herbert Chasman, American College of Life Under-
writers, '' Life Insurance Trusts -- for the Medium-Size Estate Owner";
Robert L. Klein, New York University School of Law, ‘Apportionment
of Estate Taxes and Income During the Administration of An Estate";

Charles P. Wrenn, North Brothers, Albany, Thomas E, Dolin, of

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1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
State University of New York at Albany
ESTATE PLANNERS! DAY SEPT, 29 AT SUNYA Page 2

Poskanzer, Muffson, Hessberg & Blumberg, Albany, Eugene P. Patterson,
The Bank, and Robert J. Sheedy, Ernst & Ernst, Albany, ''Estate Planning
Panel Discussion",

To date more than 150 persons have made arrangements to attend
the program, Others desiring to attend may obtain details from Mrs.
Edith Evans, P.O. Box 748, Albany, or telephone 474-2299.

Committee members include John E, Berry, New York State Bar
Association, Albany; Edward J, Bulger, Distinctive Advertising Service
Corporation, Albany; James O'K, Conwell, Jr., vice president and trust
officer, The Bank; Frederick J. Hmiel, director of continuing legal
education, New York State Bar Association, Albany; Dean William K.
Holstein, School of Business, SUNYA; Spencer L. McCarty, managing
director, New York State Association of Life Underwriters, Albany;
Kenneth R. Parker, partner, Peat, Marwick, Mitchell & Company,
Albany; and Dr. Sheehan, associate professor of law, School of Business,
SUNYA,

ROKK ROKK

Sept. 19, 1973
49-73

NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

SUNYA'S ECC AND CORNELL SPONSOR TV WORKSHOP

The Educational Communication Center of State University of
New York at Albany and the Cooperative Extension Service at Cornell
University are sponsoring a two-day television workshop in the basic
skills and techniques of television for community service organizations
beginning Sept. 20 at the ECC studios.

Panel members will include Harold Green, program manager
for General Electric Company's Cablevision Department; Stan Havoc,
general manager, Capitol Cablevision Systems; and Chuck Christiansen,
chief engineer for Capitol Cablevision Systems in Albany.

Represented by participants in the workshops will be the State
Office of Parks and Recreation, the Department of Education, Office for
Local Government, Department of Social Services, Department of
Environmental Conservation, Department of Audit and Control, Division
for Youth, Teachers Retirement System, State Department of Transportation,
State Police, State Commerce Department, Department of Agriculture
and Markets, Department of Health, Office of Planning Services, Narcotic
Addiction Control Commission, Department of Motor Vehicles, Office of
Vocational] Rehabilitation, and Temporary State Commission on the

Catskills.
Ae OR OK ok OK ok

Sept. 19, 1973
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
47-73

MEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

SUNYA CHILDREN'S TOURING ENSEMBLE TO PERFORM "GERTRUDE
STEIN'S FIRST READER"

School just is not what it used to be -- not when the teacher is
accompanied by an electric piano and her students dance and sing their
way through the classroom,

Such is the scene when the Children's Touring Ensemble of State
University of New York at Albany, under the direction of Patricia B.
Snyder, presents ''Gertrude Stein's First Reader", an original production
conceived by Herbert Machiz with music by Ann Sternberg.

Students in the ensemble include Michael Coan, Kathleen Collins,
Jody Hiatt, Kathy Mahoney, Stancey Patterson, Thomas Prager, Grant
Van Dyck, Lori Zazzaro, and Debbie Zusman,

Lessons in music, reading, and writing are subtly, yet joyously
presented, to appeal to both young and sophisticated audiences. Stein's
dictum, ''Be simple and you will understand me", prevails.

The first performance is a free one on Saturday, Oct. 13, at
l p.m. at the SUNYA Performing Arts Center Studio Theatre as part
of the Community-University Day activities. In the evening at 8 o'clock
there will be a paid performance ($2 and $1 for any student from any

school) with tickets going on sale beginning at 7 p.m.

-continued-

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
State University of New York at Albany

SUNYA CHILDREN'S TOURING ENSEMBLE TO PERFORM '|'GERTRUDE
STEIN'S FIRST READER™

Page 2

Those desiring information about the ensemble's tour program
are advised to write to Mrs. Snyder at the SUNYA Theatre Department
or to call her at 457-7581.

2k ok a oR Ok
Sept. 19, 1973
For more information call:

Patricia B. Snyder
518-45 7-7581
45-73
NEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

MARY STUART TO OPEN STATE UNIVERSITY THEATRE SEASON OCT, 17

State University Theatre opens its 1973-74 season with Friedrich
Schiller's ''Mary Stuart", directed by Albert Weiner, Wednesday through
Saturday, Oct. 17-21 at 8:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m, in the Main
Theatre of the Performing Arts Center at State University of New York
at Albany.

Although not historically correct, the play is about the dramatic
conflict between two of history's great monarchs, Mary, Queen of Scots,
and Elizabeth I, Queen of England. The costumes are designed by Jane
Morgan, a new member of the theatre faculty; the lighting is by Jerome
Hanley, and the set is by Robert Donnelly.

The cast includes Tom Brennan (Shrewsbury), William Doscher
(Mortimer), Celeste Pettijohn (Hannah Kennedy), Joseph Roach (Leiscester),
Stephen Salanger (Burleigh), Susan Scher (Elizabeth) and Marilyn Wilson
(Mary Stuart),

Tickets at $3 are available at the box office which is open Monday
through Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. The telephone number is 457-8606.
Other State University Theatre productions this season are: 'The

Wizard of Oz", Dec, 5-9; "Antigone", Feb, 6-10; Comedy of Errors",

Mar. 13-17; and''Oh, Dad, Poor Dad...", May 1-5.

-continued-
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 » 03
State University of New York at Albany
MARY STUART TO OPEN STATE UNIVERSITY THEATRE SEASON OCT, 17

Page 2

Tickets are now on sale for the entire season.

2k RK ok Ok
Sept. 19, 1973
For more information call:

Michael T, Sheehan
45 7-8608
SHE'S A WINNER! Gail V. Reimer, a May graduate of State University
of New York at Albany, receives a $400 award from Mrs. Allen Hotaling,
of Gansevoort, chairman of the statewide American History Award
Committee of the Daughters of the American Revolution and vice regent
of Saratoga Chapter, D.A.R. Others shown at the presentation are

Mrs, Alice Anderson, of Delmar, vice chairman of the committee and
registrar of Tawasentha Chapter, D.A.R., and Robert B. Morris,

dean of undergraduate studies at SUNYA. ‘The award, the only state DAR
honor of its kind given in the country, is presented to a graduating coed
excelling in American history who plans to teach history in New York
State after graduate study. Ms. Reimer, daughter of Mrs. Lenor
Reimer, 337 Cottonwood Drive, Williamsville, will study for a Master
of Arts in social studies at SUNYA where she will be graduate assistant
to Dr, Harry S. Prive, professor of history and director of social

studies, during the 1973-74 academic year.
54-73
Mae ive Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

CRAIGHEAD TO LECTURE AT SUNYA ON COMMUNITY-UNIVERSITY DAY

Among the many special attractions planned for the second annual
Community-University Day on Saturday, Oct. 13, at State University
of New York at Albany, to which the public is invited, will be three
lectures on "Wilderness and Wild Rivers" by the nationally prominent
ecologist Frank C, Craighead who is a senior research associate at
the university's Atmospheric Sciences Research Center.

Dr. Craighead has studied and surveyed rivers in the United States
for more than 30 years. He also has conducted a variety of environmental
studies under the sponsorship of the National Geographic Society, the
National Science Foundation, and the Environmental Research Institute,
along with other private and government agencies, The lectures are
scheduled for 11:30 a.m., 2:30 p.m., and 3:30 p.m. in Lecture Center 25,

On the first open house day for the community held last year the
ASRC program proved to be extremely popular with visitors of all ages,
This year once again the center will feature some of its many facets of
operation. Located on the 22nd and 23rd floors of Mohawk Tower on the
Indian Quadrangle, the program will begin at 11 a.m. and continue until
5 p.m. A series of displays, exhibits, experiments, and presentations

will be provided throughout the day.

-continued-
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
State University of New York at Albany
CRAIGHEAD TO LECTURE AT SUNYA ON COMMUNITY-UNIVERSITY DAY
Page 2

The ASRC will explain its weather investigation with demonstrations
of atmospheric electricity and lightning simulation, cold-box experiments
concerned with cloud seeding and water conversion from droplets to ice
crystals, and microphotographs of cloud droplets and ice crystals.

Of interest to daily life will be displays on the extensive pollution,
wind, and temperature instrumentation used to analyze and forecast
weather. Ray Falconer, ASRC research associate and WROW weather
forecaster, will conduct several live interviews at various times during
the day.

Miscellaneous other presentations will include photographs of the
recent solar eclipse, slides of ASRC Whiteface Mountain research
activities, explanations of ASRC work on bacteria transfer between
surface water and the atmosphere, and diagrams of pollutants distribution
over New York State. In addition to the two floors of displays in Mohawk
Tower, the weather-map room, located in the Earth Science building,
room 332, will be open for tours and explanations,

C-U Day events will begin on the campus located between Western
and Washington avenues near the western boundary of Albany at 10 a.m,
and continue until 5 p,m. The opening ceremony is planned for 10:30 a,m,

On the same day SUNYA will be joining in the celebration of the
25th anniversary of State University of New York which is unique in its

organization and the breadth of its educational mission, It is the largest

-continued-

State University of New York at Albany
CRAIGHEAD TO LECTURE AT SUNYA ON COMMUNITY-UNIVERSITY DAY
Page 3

coordinated, centrally managed, multi-level system of public higher
education in the nation,

Since its founding in 1948, SUNY has grown from 29 state-supported
but unaffiliated campuses into an organized system of higher education
comprising 72 institutions which enrolled 234, 000 full-time and 127, 000

part-time students in the 1972-73 academic year.

2k Rk ok ok ok

Sept. 21, 1973

53-73
a We Office of Community Relations
H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

A Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

DISCUSSION ON CHILE AT SUNYA SEPT, 24

A roundtable discussion of the historic coup in Chile will
be held in the Campus Center ballroom at State University of
New York at Albany Monday, Sept. 24, beginning at 7p.m, The
public is invited to question the views of the discussant,
Participating in the discussion, sponsored by the university's
Puerto Rican Studies Program, the department of Hispanic and Italian
studies, and the Center for Inter-American Studies will be Carlos
A. Astiz, political science; Alicja Iwanska, sociology, Bernard
K. Johnpoll, political science, and Marvin J, Sternberg, economics,
Serving as director and coordinator will be Fernando Francheschi,
a political science major.

HK KOK

Sept. 21, 1973

4400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 » 02 * 03
FS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

STUDENT PERFORMANCES IN EXPERIMENTAL THEATRE AND
FREE MUSIC STORE

Experimental Theatre, State University of New York at Albany,
will present on October 6 and 7 "Amerika--An Evening of Song and
Dance," featuring popular American and show music from the 30's to
the present. The students who will take part are Jody Hiatt, Bruce
Kellerhouse, and Debbie Zusman.

Performances will be at 7:30 p.m, and 9 p.m, each evening
in the Laboratory Theatre of the Performing Arts Center. Free
tickets are available beginning one hour prior to each performance.

Free Music Store will present ''Frederic Rzewski in an Evening
of Improvisation with Students and Friends'' Monday, Oct. 8 at
8:30 p.m. in the Laboratory Theatre. The performance is free
and no tickets are required,

ak OR OK ke
Sept. 21, 1973
For more information call;

Michael T. Sheehan
(518 )457-8608

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03

54-73
NERS Office of Community Relations = 5-73

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

SUNYA PROFESSOR BACK ON CAMPUS AFTER RESEARCH IN CZECHOSLOVAKIA

Joseph F. Zacek, professor of history at State University of New York
at Albany, has returned to the campus after eight months of historical research
in Czechoslovakia, as part of the official international exchange of scholars
between the United States and Czechoslovakia.

The exchange is sponsored by the International Research and Exchange
Board, New York, and the Ministries of Education of the Czech and Slovak
Republics. During his stay Professor Zacek worked in archives and other
repositories in the three major regions of the country, Bohemia, Moravia,
and Slovakia. He was attached to the nation's three leading universities,
Charles University at Prague, Purkyne University at Brno, and Comenius
University at Bratislava,

En route home Dr. Zacek participated in the Seventh International
Congress of Slavists in Warsaw, Poland. He read a paper, "Slovakia and
the Czech National Revival: Introduction to a Case Study", and represented
the committee of the American Historical Association which had arranged
for the participation of American histories this year, for the first time,
in the Slavists' congress.

KOK OK Ok Ok

Sept. 21, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 « 02 » 03
51-73

Be We Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations
SUNYA Nathalie E, Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

MANAGEMENT VITALITY SEMINAR AT SUNYA OCT, 18

A seminar on management vitality, ''A Key to Survival and Growth
in the 70's'', will be conducted by the Center for Executive Development
of the College of General Studies, State University of New York at Albany,
for area managers from business and industry on Thursday, Oct. 18,
in the university's Assembly Hall. It will be conducted by Donald F,
Favreau, director of the center and assistant professor on the college
faculty.

The program outline includes the management challenge; manage-
ment's authority to manage; how to motivate people; a management
game-workshop; and managerial obsolescence, success, and suicide.

Professor Favreau has been in the field of industrial relations,
manpower utilization, and management development and training for
the past 20 years. Prior to his SUNYA appointment he was manpower
coordinator for the New York State Departmeat of Labor,

Additional information about the seminar is available from

Professor Favreau at the Center for Executive Development, 135
Western avenue, Albany. The telephone number is 472-8493,

The program has been planned for executives, middle managers,
general foremen, superintendents, office managers, regional sales
managers, line or staff department heads, and managers who are

managing other supervisors or managers.

OK OK KKK
Sept. 21, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 « 02 ° 03
EWS. Office of Community Relations _

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations
SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

TWO-DAY PROGRAM FOR NURSES AT SUNYA SCHEDULED

The continuing education department of the School of Nursing,
State University of New York at Albany, will hold a two-day program
for practicing nurses in all types of clinical settings on Thursday and
Friday, Oct. 11 and 12. The subject will be ''Physiology: Cardio-
Pulmonary-Renal Systems". Aline Demers, associate professor of
nursing at the University of Vermont, will be the speaker.

Content of the program will cover the cardio-pulmonary-renal
systems and their relationships; cellular transport; fluid and electrolyte
balance; neurological and endocrine influences; observable phenomena
involving tissues, pulmonary function, renal function and chemical
imbalances; and application of knowledge to planning, giving, and evalu-
ation of nursing care, Participants will be encouraged to review a recent
text on anatomy and physiology with special reference to the cardio-
pulmonary -renal network,

The fee for the program is $30. Additional information is available
from Mrs. Judith Whitaker, associate professor, continuing education,
School of Nursing, SUNYA, 1400 Washington avenue, Albany 12222,

2K OK OK OK OK

Sept. 27, 1973

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 © 02 ° 03
59-73
MEWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

LECTURE ON PUERTO RICAN YOUTH AT SUNYA OCT. 5

Samuel Betances, a noted authority on Puerto Rican identity,
will deliver a public lecture on the topic, 'Puerto Rican Youth: Race
and The Search for The Wider Identity’ on Friday, Oct. 5, beginning
at 7 p.m. in Lecture Center 3 at State University of New York at Albany,

Dr. Betances, professor of sociology at Northeastern Illinois
University, is publisher of ''The Rican Journal", a Puerto Rican
periodical of contemporary Puerto Rican thought. He earned his master's
and doctoral degrees at Harvard and his undergraduate degree at Columbia
Union College in Washington, D.C.

The educator's many public service activities include consultancies
to the Institute for Social Policy in Illinois, the Illinois Commission on
Human Relations, the Wesleyan University Conference on the Recruitment
of Puerto Rican and Chicano Students to Colleges in the Northeast, and
to the dean of admissions on minority recruitment of students to the
Harvard Graduate School of Education,

Dr. Betances was born in Harlem of Puerto Rican parents and spent
his early years in the schools of Puerto Rico, South Bronx, and Chicago,
Throughout his professional es been deeply concerned with the
problems facing minority young people.

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Sept. 27, 1973
1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 + 02 * 03
REWS Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations

SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

JAZZ PIANIST TO GIVE SUNYA CONCERT OCT, 1

Lee Shaw, jazz pianist, will be the first guest performer in the
"Keyboard '73"' series of programs to be offered by SUNYA Pianists
at the Performing Arts Center of State University of New York at Albany
during October and November. Ms, Shaw will perform with Stan Shaw,
drums, and Mike Flanagan, bass, on Monday evening, Oct. 1, in the
Arena Theatre at 7 o'clock and again at 9 o'clock.

The pianist was born and raised in Chicago where she studied
classical piano at the American Conservatory, In 1961 when she met
her husband, Stan, she switched to jazz. Mr. Shaw has appeared with
George Shearing, Bud Powell, and the Raymond Scott Orchestra. To-
gether Lee and Stan Shaw have played the Puerto Rican Jazz Festival

and New York City's Birdland, Village Vanguard, and The Embers.

60-73

Other upcoming "Keyboard '73'' programs are Igor Kipnis, harpsichord,

Wednesday, Oct. 17, 8:30 p.m., Recital Hall; Frederick Rzewski, piano,
Sunday, Nov. 4, 4p.m., Main Theatre; and Jane Carlson, piano,
Sunday, Nov. 18, 4 p.m., Recital Hall.

Free tickets for each concert are available at the box office two
weeks ahead of the concert date and at the door. ''Keyboard '73"' is

supported by contributions and by the proceeds from benefit concerts.

2 Ok OK Ok ak ok

Sept. 27, 1973
400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
EWE Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations
SUNYA Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

BENJAMIN PHOTOS PLANNED AT SUNYA ART GALLERY

Photographs by Martin Benjamin, of Albany, an alumnus of State
University of New York at Albany, will be shown at the University Art
Gallery from Saturday, Oct. 13, through Sunday, Nov. 4. A reception
for the exhibition's opening, to which the public is invited, will be held
from 3 p.m, to 6 p.m. on Saturday, Oct. 13, which is being observed
as Community-University Day at SUNYA.

Mr. Benjamin recently was named one of 61 national finalists in
the Time/Life Bicentennial Photography Contest for Professional and
Amateur Photographers. The competition is recognized by the American
Revolution Bicentennial Commission.

While at SUNYA Mr. Benjamin was editor of the 1971 "Torch", the
school's yearbook and a staff photographer for the university's Office of
Community Relations. Currently he is teaching photography at the College
of St. Rose, Albany.

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Sept. 27, 1973
For further information please call:

Nancy Liddle
457 -3375

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 %* Area Code 518 457-4901 © 02 * 03

57-73
56-73
Ree Office of Community Relations

H. David Van Dyck, Director, Community Relations
SUNY A Nathalie E. Lampman, Director, Information Services
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

SUNYA CHAMBER BAND CONCERT OCT. 4

The University Chamber Band, conducted by Charles Boito, will
perform a program of music for winds Thursday evening, Oct. 4, in the
Recital Hall of the Performing Arts Center at State University of New York
at Albany. The concert, for which there is no admission charge, will
begin at 8:30,

Marjory Fuller, mezzo-soprano, will be the featured soloist. Among
the works to be performed are Mahler's ''Um Mitternacht", a newly-
discovered work for voice and winds, and compositions by Spohr, Rorem,
and Mozart.

Ms. Fuller, who teaches voice in the SUNYA department of music,

is a former faculty member of DePauw University where she appeared in
many operatic roles, Mr. Boito, who was the assistant conductor of the

Yale Band before coming to SUNYA, holds degrees from the University of
Southern California and Yale University.

The University Chamber Band is a new group, predominantly composed
of students from the University Wind Ensemble. Its purpose is to perform
works that do not call for the large orchestration of a wind ensemble or
concert band,

The concert is sponsored by the university's music department.

AOR KK Rk

Sept. 27, 1973

For information call;
Michael T, Sheehan
457 -8479

1400 Washington Ave., Albany, New York 12222 * Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 © 03
Albany tines-tnion “/
Knickerbocker News y
Union Star \ /
Schenectady chery Sf
The Saratogian J
Record Newspapers
Amsterdam Evening Recorde:
Rotterdam Reporter
Washington Avenue Park
Journal Chain

East Glenville, Weekly

The Townsman

KITE

The Commercial News
Stockade Spy

ADIRONDACK GOMMUNITY COLLEGE

SPONSORED BY WARREN AND WASHINGTON COUNTIES
UNDER THE PROGRAM OF THE STATE UNIVERSITY GF NEW YORK

GLENS FALLS, N. Y. 12801

OFFICE OF THE

DIRECTOR oF Sen ype hBEdains

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4

September 19, 1973

Mr. Robert Rice

Community Relations Office
State University of New York
Albany, New York

Dear Mr. Rice:

We are having an open house on the morning of
October 13, from 9:00 to noon.

This is to be a rather informal affair for the people
in this area to be able to come and have a tour of the campus and
meet faculty members who will be present.

As for the media, we have two radio stations in town -
WWSC on Dix Avenue and WBZA on Everts Avenue. We also have two
daily papers, the POST STAR & TIMES, on Lawrence and Cooper Streets,
and THE TRI-COUNTY NEWS, 15 South Street. In addition, we receive
a great deal of exposure in the following county papers:

GRANVILLE SENTINEL, Granville, N. Y. 12832

GREENWICH JOURNAL, Greenwich, New York 12834

NORTH CREEK NEWS-ENTERPRISE, North Creek, New York 12853
TICONDEROGA SENTINEL, Ticonderoga, New York 12833
WARRENSBURG-LAKE GEORGE NEWS, Warrensburg, New York 12885
WASHINGTON COUNTY POST, Cambridge, New York 12816
WHITEHALL TIMES, Whitehall, New York 12887

NORTHERN SUN, Lake Luzerne, New York 12846

Sincerely,

Havel {Pr alo,
Harold Bradley

Director of Service Programs

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Date Uploaded:
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