Press Releases, 1969 August

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

mm Nathalie Lam mation Di ©
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS deen Coie Sa ds7-apor s 08 Ge

IMMEDIATE

More than 2, 400 students will attend the 1969 Summer Planning Conference at State
University of New York at Albany. The conference, initiated in 1964, will involve seven
three-day sessions for freshmen and four two-day orientation periods for transfer students
curing the weeks of July 1 - August 16,

Dr. Sorrell E, Chesin, associate dean of students, said that the conference is being
expanded this year to include a full orientation program for an estimated 1, 800 freshmen
aad 600 transfer students, Edward Bazinet, residence hall director, is serving as
coordinator for the conference.

The program involves faculty, administration and students. Staff members are
responsible for a variety of activities including academic advisement, counseling and
disc ssion sessions, registration, and other official functions. Much of the program is
administered and conducted by university students who are selected as conference
assistants.

Avprexpuatety 250 freshmen will attend each of the seven conference sessions and
125 transfer students will attend each of four transfer sessions, The program includes
opportunity for a variety of informal’ social and recreational activities,

There is a special program for parents and guests of students, which includes an
opportunity to meet with principal university officials. Dr. Clifton C. Thorne, vice
president for student affairs, and Dr. Robert Morris, dean of the University College,
efficially welcome parents at the opening convocation. Campus tours also are provided.

(Editors; Enclosed are lists of freshmen, transfer students, and
conference assistants from your area. )

se
August 5, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Nancy Liptak
Debra Lobel
Maureen Maloney
Nancy Masterson
Robert McCormick
Margaret Miggins
Dale Oehm

Emily Porzia
Elise Riley

Mark Robarge
Wesley Romansky
Lawrence Rosenbaum
Sharon Rybicky
Richard Salomon
Stephen Sheehan
Sharon Schneider
Michael Smith
Walter Stubbs
Vincent Zabinski

Gail Zampier

SD

158 Dwight Avenue

. 878 Center Drive

1233 West Second Street
Colby Road

128 Hornell Street
Drewville Heights

R.D. #3

2283 Second Street

21 West Sanders Street
M.D, #1

92 Park Avenue

48 Valiant Drive

1236 Fish Creek Road
R.F.D. 7 Fairway Drive
141 East Street

850 Oxford Court

253 - 01 61st Avenue
1066 Merillon Avenue
256 Quail Street

Darrow School

Corning
Franklin Square
Elmira
Whitefield, N.H.
Nornell
Brewster
Brewster

East Meadows
Greenlawn
Washingtonville
Bay Shore
Henrietta

West Leydon
Kingston

Fort Edward
Valley Stream
Little Neck
Westbury
Albany

New Lebanon
State University of New York at Albany
Transfer Summer Planning Conference
July 28 - 29, 1969

Ralph Behr 34 Brokaw Lane Great Neck
Lynne Beiermeister 1803 Ninth Street Rensselaer
Craig Benson 29 Van Buren Avenue Ravena
Anne Connolly 23 Pacific Avenue Nannot
Thomas Crennan 17 Dexter Street Whitesboro
Roger Dick 6 Chatfield Place Painted Post
Thomas Dinardi 203 Fairview Avenue Hudson
Constance Ernst 870 West 181 Street New York
Sandor Fein 899 East Eighth Street Brooklyn
Stephen Fondino Route 4 Box 41 Saugerties
Peter Garlock 57 John Street Dion

Douglas Gootz
Ellen Grant
Stephen Herbert
William Herbert
Barbara Howes
Traute Hustedt

Alan Kaufman

1524 Van Hoesen Road
39 Farmer Street

222 Washburn Road
222 Washburn Road
Valentine Road

241 Oak Street

447 Linda Drive

Castleton-on-Hudson
Canton

Briarcliff Manor
Briarcliff Manor
Shoreham

Bellmore

East Meadow

Randolph Kathmann Treadwell Treadwell
June Kenfield William Hollow Road Ischua
Carol Kopack Church Street Port Leydon
Donald Leathersich 30 Howard Avenue Churchville
William Leicht 242 Ontario Street Albany
Miles Levine 40 Richefield Street Dion
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R STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
a s) H. David Ven Dyck, Assistant to the President
bis Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

Dean O, William Perlmutter of State University of New York at Albany will direct a
seminar for the Danforth Foundation at the University of Chicago beginning August 26.

The seminar is part of the program of the National Conference for Danforth Associates,
sponsored by the Danforth Foundation.

Some 500 faculty members and their wives from throughout the country will attend the
six-day conference, which has as its theme, ''The Future University: Can It Realize Its
Integrity?'' Seminars are organized around three main topics: the power structure of the
university, the teaching-learning process, and the university and its environment. Dean
Perlmutter will participate in the component dealing with the teaching-learning process
and will lead the seminar on the social sciences.

Seven other seminars are included on the program: Natural Sciences, Professor Joseph
J. Schwab, University of Chicago; Philosophy and History of Ideas, Professor Anthony A.
Nemetz, University of Georgia; General Education, Dean Frederick J. Crosson, University
of Notre Dame; Fine Arts, Dr. Joshua C. Taylor, University of Chicago; Poetry and Creative
Writing, Professor Catherine Firman, LaVerne College; Literary Criticism, Dr. Jerome
Taylor, University of Chicago; and Religion and Human Values, Dr. Thomas A. Langford,
Duke University.

The Danforth Foundation, ranking with Ford and Rockefeller, is one of the leading
private foundations supporting higher education. It has been particularly influential in
exploring the contribution that might be made by religious values.

2 RAR

August 5, 1969

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

Wallace W. Taylor, professor of education at State University of New York at
Albany, will serve as vice-chairman of the Fourth International Seminar on Special
Education, The seminar will be held in Cork, Ireland, from September 8 - 13. He
plans to attend concurrent meetings of the World Commission on Special Education.

Dr. Taylor has been a member of the commission since 1957, and is presently a
vice-chairman,

From September 13-20, Dr. Taylor will serve as chairman of a seminar at the
World Congress on Rehabilitation to be held in Dublin, Ireland. He will deal with
special education in developing countries.

Professor Taylor received his bachelor of arts and science degree in education
at Kansas State Teachers College and his master's and doctoral degrees from State
University of Iowa.

Prior to accepting his present position at SUNYA, Dr. Taylor taught education
and was head of social studies in The Milne School, SUNYA. Among his supplementary
work experiences, Dr. Taylor includes: visiting lecturer at Colorado State College of
Education; educational consultant for the American-Korean Foundation; visiting professor
at the University of Bergen, Norway; and faculty co-director, International Institute on
the United Nations, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

seat

August 5, 1969

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

Vincent J. Schaefer, director, Atmospheric Sciences Research Center, (ASRC),
State University of New York at Albany, has returned from an excursion into the
wilderness of northern Arizona and southern Utah conducting an ecological study.

Some 20 scientists spent several days in the field under primitive conditions
near Lake Powell and on a Navajo Indian reservation where groundwork was laid
for cooperative plans with the Indians for future ecological study. A complete
report on the expedition is expected within a month,

In addition to Dr. Schaefer, six other SUNYA faculty participated in the field
study. Included were Harold H. Blum, professor of biological sciences; Victor
Rabinowitch, director, Center for Science and the Future of Human Affairs; Alfred
Hulstrunk, assistant director, ASRC; Austin W. Hogan, research associate, ASRC;
Robert Standish, technical assistant, ASRC; and Frank C. Craighead, senior research
associate, ASRC, and ecologist at the university's Jackson Hole Field Station, Moose,
Wyo.

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August 5, 1969

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
Edward Berg, professor of biological sciences at State University of
New York at Albany since 1956, has been named director of health related pro-
fessions at Fresno (Cal,) State College, effective September 8. The announcement
was made by Dr. Horace O. Schorling, dean of the school of professional studies
at Fresno.

Dr. Schorling said, "The department is particularly fortunate to have obtained
the talents of Dr. Berg. His broad experience in the field of health will bring an
added dimension to the professional studies program."

A graduate of Brooklyn College, Dr. Berg holds a doctorate from Cornell
University. Before joining the Albany faculty in 1956, he taught at Cornell University
Medical College and at Manhattan Medical Assistant's School. He is a member of
several professional organizations, including the Royal Society of Tropical Medic:ine
and Hygiene and the American Society of Parasitologists.

The biologists has foreign language proficiency in German, French, and Spanish,
He has published numerous professional and scientific articles. During the past
academic year Dr. Berg participated in the Academic Administration Internship Program
of the American Council on Education at State University of New York at Buffalo.

SRR IK IK

August 5, 1969

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

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

IMMEDIATE

Deborah Caldwell, daughter of Mr. Warren Caldwell, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Caldwell resides at 1308 - 60th Street,

Des Moines.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Caldwell will be taking 15 hours at the University of Guadalajara,
Included in her courses are the history of the United States, archeology,
a& seminar on the literature of the state of Jalisco, history of Mexican
art, and the history of Mexico. She will reside at Morelos No. 1520,
Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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August 5, 1969

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1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
it om 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

Debbie Byron, of 9 Lou Court, Melville, Long Tsland, is one of 23

students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester-abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969,
to January, 1970. She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field
in Italian.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Byron will be taking 14 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are advanced Spanish, archeology,
a seminar on the literature of the*state of Jalisco and Spanish
etymology, and history of Mexican art. She will reside at Morelos No.
1520, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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August 5, 1969

News NES
SLL Soo,

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

Miss Nancy Burston, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth D. Burston,
is one of 23 students from State University of New York at Albany
selected by the Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in
the semester-abroad program at the University of Guadalajara in

Mexico from September, 1969 to January, 1970. Miss Burston resides

at 386 Pawling Street, Watertown. She is a Spanish major with a
second field in inter-American studies.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their will-
ingness to represent their university and country in a different cultural
setting.

Miss Burston will be taking 12 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are Latin American history, liter-
ature of the state of Jalisco, archeology, history of religions, and
Spanish history. She will reside at Alhondiga No. 2225, Jardines del
Country, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico,
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August 5, 1969

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1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
t J ( STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
a ss H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
| Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

| IMMEDIATE

Karen Berzok, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irving Berzok, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester-abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969
to January, 1970. Miss Berzok resides at 73] Tanwood Drive, West Hempstead.
She is &@ Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in inter-American
| studies,

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university‘and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Berzok will be taking 12 semester hours at the University of

| Guadalajara. Included in her courses are Spanish literature, Mexican
history, history of Mexican art, and advanced Spanish. She will reside
| at Alhondiga No. 2225, Jardines del Country, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.
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August 5, 1969

News
SABER Som

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

Donna Balamut, daughter of Mrs. Frederick Balamut and the late
Mr. Balamut, is one of 23 students from State University of New York
at Albany selected by the Center of Inter-American Studies to partici-
pate in the semester-abroad program at the University of Guadalajara
in Mexico from September, 1969 to January, 1970. Miss Balamut resides
at 102-30 Queens Boulevard, Forest Hills. She is a Spanish major at
SUNYA with a second field in Italian.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievement and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selcted
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Balamut will be taking 14 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are advanced Spanish, a seminar on
the literature of the state of Jalisco, archeology, the history of religions,

and Spanish etymology. She will reside at Morelos No. 1520, Guadalajara,

Jalisco, Mexico.

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August 5, 1969 —
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Long Re oy Crsao

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

Cindy Abrams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd G. Abrams, is one of
23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Abrams resides at 333 E. Broadway, Long Beach,

She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in sociology.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Abrams will be taking 16 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara, Included in her courses are Mexican literature, a seminar
on the literature of the state of Jalisco, history of the United States,
anthropology, and world literature. She will reside at Bolivia No. 612,
Frac, Las Americas, Guadalajara,Jalisco, Mexico.

August 5, 1969

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

Lissa Gentile, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alphonso Gentile, is one

| of 23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by
the Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester-
abroad program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September,
1969 to January, 1970. Miss Genbile:resides at 519 No. Brandywine Ave.,
Schenectady. She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in
| Italian,

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability
to speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected

according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their

willingness to represent their university and country in a different

cultural setting.

|
|
1

Miss Gentile will be taking 14 semester hours at the University of
| Guadalajara. Included in her courses are archeology, history of religions,
history of Mexican art, a seminar on the literature of the state of
Jalisco, and Spanish etymology. She will reside at Calle del Rayo 2364,
Entre Arcos y Paseo de la Arboleda, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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August 6, 1969 NMecnan Shen

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
|
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hae 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

Linda Flato, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Flato, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester-abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Flato resides 110 Walter Court, Commack. She is

a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in French.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their willingness to represent their university and country
in a different cultural setting and their interest in a study-abroad
experience.

Miss Flato will be taking 16 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are French, advanced Spanish, a
seminar on the literature of the state of Jalisco, history of religions,
and anthropology. She will reside at Bolivia Norte 539, Frac. Las
Americas, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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August 6, 1969 de .
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1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
]

ie 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

Laure Dunne, of 55 Broadway, Smithtown, is one of 23 students

from State University of New York at Albany selected by the Center of
Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester-abroad program
at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to
January, 1970. Miss Dunne is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second
field in French.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Dunne will be taking 15 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are advanced Spanish, a seminar
on the literature of the state of Jalisco, French, history of Mexico,
and geographical anthropology. She will reside at Bolivia Norte 539,
Frac. Las Americas, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

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August 6, 1969

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GMM Sen

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

Fran Dreher, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Meyer M. Dreher, is one of
23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Dreher resides at 31-74 29th Street, Astoria.

She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in French.

| The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability
to speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also
selected according to their interest in a study-abroad experience

| and their willingness to represent their university and country in a

| different cultural setting.

Miss Dreher will be taking 15 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are advanced French, history of the
United States, anthropology, history of religions, and a seminar on the
literature of the state of Jalisco. She will reside at Calle del Rayo 2364,
Entre Arcos y Paseo de la Arboleda, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.
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August 6, 1969 be. Qooans Boerne Rosn

Jone Salo Rica

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
ie 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

Amy Davis, who resides in Woodridge, is one of 23 students from

State University of New York at Albany selected by the Center of Inter-

American Studies to participate in the semester abroad program at the

University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to January, 1970.

Miss Davis majors in inter-American studies at SUNYA.

| The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their will-
ingness to represent their university and country in a different cultural
setting.

| Miss Davis will be taking 16 semester hours at the University of

| Guadalajara. Included in her courses are Mexican literature, archeology,

| Mexican history, history of Mexican art, and history of Latin America,

She will reside at Bolivia No. 621, Frac. Las Americas, Guadalajara,

Jalisco, Mexico.
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| August 6, 1969

| de: Newa (Weshungd) .
Verne - Were Ree wr

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 National Science Foundation has granted $42, 000 to the Research Foundation
of State University of New York for a project directed by Frederick G, Walz, Jr.,
assistant professor of biological sciences, State University of New York at Albany.
The award will be used to research ''Relaxation Spectra of Myosin A,"

The investigation consists of temperature-jump kinetic studies and related
equilibrium binding experiments on myosin A. The studies are an attempt to elucidate
the mechanism of the adenosine triphosphatase activity of myosin A and the nature of
different myosin A-Ligand interactions.

Dr. Walz came to the university in 1968 after doing postdoctoral research at
Cornell University. He is a graduate of Manhattan College and hold a doctoral

degree from State University of New York Downstate Medical Center.

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August 7, 1969

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

Joseph P, Mascarenhas, associate professor of biological sciences, State
University of New York at Albany, has received a grant of $18, 000 from National
Science Foundation (NSF) through the Research Foundation of State University of New
York, His work will deal with Synthesis of Wall Material During Pollen Tube
Development,"

Dr. Mascarenhas' long term research interests are in the molecular control of
development of higher organisms. He selected pollen for his present research because
pollen offers many advantages in a study of the molecular basis of development not
found in most other plant or animal systems.

Bachelor and master of science degrees were awarded Dr. Mascarenhas by the
University of Poona, India. He received his Ph.D, from the University of California at
Berkeley. The biologist taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Wellesley
College, Amherst College, and Berkeley, before coming to Albany in 1968. He also
worked several years as research officer for Parry and Company, Pamba River
Sugar Factory, Tiruvalla, India.

Dr. Mascarenhas has published a number of articles in scientific journals and

has been the recipient of previous grants from Brown-Hazen Fund of Research Corp-

oration and from NSF,
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August 7, 1969

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

SU NAAN ] | eh :
OW bas W Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

Jagadish Garg, professor of physics at State University of New York at Albany,
has received $12, 300 as a renewal of his grant from the National Science Foundation to
support his research on the ''Analysis and Interpretation of High Resolution Total Neutron
Cross Section Measurements'"for another year. The total amount of the grant for a period
of three years has been $34, 000.

The research is being done in collaboration with the faculty at Columbia University
where the experimental work was done using their 380 Mev Synchrocyclotron. The inves-
tigations are considered important from the point of understanding the structure of nuclei
and, in some cases, providing crucial information needed in the design of atomic reactors.

In addition to the investigations, Dr. Garg also is doing research work on the radi-
ative capture of neutrons in collaboration with scientists at the Brookhaven National Lab-
oratory, making use of their high flux beam reactor. Recently the first doctoral thesis
of the physics department by a graduate student, Karim Rimawi, was completed making
use of the research facility.

Dr. Garg also is engaged in the future planning of the research program in nuclear
structure physics at the SUNYA campus as the director of the nuclear accelerator lab-
oratory to be installed next year.

Professor Garg was born in India and received his Doctor of Science degree at Paris
University, France. Later he spent three years at Manchester University, England, and
five years at Columbia University in New York. He joined the Albany university faculty in
1966. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and a Fellow of the Institute of
Physics (U.K.). Last year he presented a paper on his research at an International Confer-
ence at Tokoyo, Japan, and one paper at the International Conference on Neutron Cross

Section at Washington. This year on August 25 he will be presenting a paper at the
International Conference on Properties of Nuclear States to be held in Montreal.

seokokaok
August 7, 1969

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
IMM iDEA HE:

Hans H, Toch, professor of criminal justice at the School of Criminal Justice,
State University of New York at Albany, will direct a program for the training of police
officers for non-violence-prone conduct to be set up in Oakland, Calif., under a
$84, 134 grant received by Dr. Toch from the National Institute of Mental Health,

U.S. Public Healih Service.

The retraining unit for violence-prone officers will take the form of a research
group concerned with police-civilian violence. Preclassified violence-prone officers
will be assigned to the unit as staff members. At first, the officers will engage in
secondary analysis of recorded incidents culminating in violence. They then will shift
to case study materials and to self-analysis designed to point up the role of officers in
producing violence~prone interactions. The officers will explore their own contributions
to violence through various techniques of simulation. The next stage of training will
consist of a problem~solving effort to originate and rehearse non-violence-prone inter-
personal responses. Monitoring and evaluation procedures will allow feedback and
permit a systematic description of training results.

Evaluation of training will include the comparison of performance of trainees
and a matched control group of non-trained violence-prone officers. The graduates
of the program for whom training has proved effective will become workshop leaders
in a formal effort to extend violence~reducting training to the rank and file of a police
department. The workshops will be designed by the trainees and will use techniques
similar to those employed in the intensive phase,

Engaged on the training project, headed by Professor Toch, will be Raymond
Galvin, visiting associate professor at the School of Criminal Justice whose field
is police science and administration; John Guidici, captain of the Oakland Police

1400 WASHINGTON sme Redany, NEW YORK 12203
Training Project:. Toch

Frage 2

Department, who has a degree in public administration; and J. Douglas Grant,
president of New Careers Development Organization who has a graduate degree in
psychology.

Dr, Toch, an alumnus of Brooklyn College, received his doctoral degree in
psychology from Princeton University, He is interested particularly in psychological
issues in criminal justice. He is the author of the books, ''The Social Psychology of
Social Movements," and "Violent Men," his most recent published work. Professor

Toch also edited and contributed to the book, ‘Legal and Criminal Psychology."

yeioioiook

August 7,. 1969
= 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

Robert Novak, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Novak, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969
to January, 1970. Mr. Novak resides at_38 Southland Drive, Rochester.

He majors in inter-American studies-at SUNYA.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students according
to theif previous academic achievements and their ability to speak, comprehend,
write and read Spanish. Students are also selected according to their interest
in a study-abroad experience and their willingness to represent their
university and country in a different cultural setting.

Mr. Novak will be taking 16 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in his courses are Mexican history III and IV,

Spanish history, Mexican literature, and archeology. He will reside at
Guatamala 531, Froc. Las Americas, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.
aHHE

August 8, 1969

Radadn © be, Demomneb + Ghroas de
“Wigner Noadion

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

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

IMMEDIATE

Janet Montecalvo, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Charles Montecalvo, is
one of 23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected
by the Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester
abroad program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September,
1969 to January, 1970. Miss Montecalvo resides at 118 Spruce Street,

West Hempstead. She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in
inter-American studies.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Montecalvo will be taking 15 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara, Included in her courses are Mexican history, world geography,
archeology, a seminar on the literature of the state of Jalisco, am
history of Latin America. She will reside at Bolivia 621, Froc, Las
Americas, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

i
August 8, 1969

So Nevoeb uy
SMW Kean

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
|

& 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

IMMEDIATE

Marsha Mehr, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Mehr, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Mehr resides at_4O Fox Place, Hicksville, She

is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in Fortuguese and inter-
American studies.
The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their willingness
to represent their university and country in a different cultural setting,
Miss Mehr = will be taking 16 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are Mexican literature, archeology,
anthropology, history of religions, and Mexican history. She will reside

at Calle del Rayo 2364, Entre Arcos y Paseo de la Arboleda, Guadalajara,

Jalisco, Mexico,

HH
August 8, 1969

ado: Bde, Tel News

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
S 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

|
|

IMMEDIATE

Nevia Loborec, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Zdenko Loborec, is one of 23

students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the Center

of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad program at

the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to January, 1970.

Miss lLoborec resides at 55 Grand Avenue, Freeport. She is a Spanish

| major at SUNYA with a second field in French.

| The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students according
to their previous academic achievements and their ability to speak, comprehend,
write and read Spanish. Students are also selected according to their interest
in a study-abroad experience and their willingness to represent their

university and country in a different cultural setting.

Miss Loboree will be taking 12 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajare, Included in her courses are Spanish literature, French,
history of Mexican art, and history of Latin America, She will reside at
Bolivia No. 621, Froc. Las Americas, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

att

August 8, 1969

de, Kewss Xe
; ae
Cembe FleaW Nea,

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Ag 3 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

Phyllis Larsen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Larsen, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the Center
of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad program at
the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to January, 1970.

Miss Larsen resides at 583 Christie Street, South Hempstead, She majors in
inter-American studies at SUNYA,

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students according
to their previous academic achievements and their ability to speak, comprehend,
write and read Spanish. Students are also selected according to their
interest in a study-abroad experience and their willingness to represent
their university and country in a different cultural setting.

Miss Larsen will be taking 15 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are history of Mexican art, history of
Mexico I and II, a seminar on the literature of the state of Jalisco,
and archeology. She will reside at Avenida La Paz 2448, Colonia Reforma,
Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

tHHE

August 8, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
B 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

Sandra Grossfeld, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Purroy Grossfeld, is one of
23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad program
at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to

January, 1970. Miss Grossfeld resides at 6 N. Eckerson Lane, Spring Valley.

She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in inter-American studies.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to speak,
comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected according to
their interest in a study-abroad experience and their willingness to
represent their university and country in a different cultural setting.

Miss Grossfeld will be taking 15 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara, Included in her courses are Mexican literature of the state of
Jalisco, archeology, logic, Mexican history, Spanish etymology, and
constitutional rights. She will reside at Alhondiga No. 2225, Jardines del
Country, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

August 8, 1969

RecRlard) Journ War

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

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

IMMEDIATE

Patricia Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Young, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center for Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Young resides at 210 Bagatelle Road, Melville.

She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in psychology.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Young will be taking 13 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara, Included in her courses are archeology, Mexican literature,
world literature, and a seminar on the literature of the state of Jalisco.
She will reside at Bolivia Norte 539, Frac. Las Americas, Guadalajra,
Jalisco, Mexico,

itt

August 11, 1969

bo. News \
Ql Sour

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
i 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

Hendrik van den Berg, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floris..C. van den Berg, is
one of 23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by
the Center for Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to
January, 1970. Mr. van den Berg resides in Slingerlands. He is an
economics major at SUNYA with a second field in Spanish and Portuguese.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Mr. van den Berg will be taking 15 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in his courses are economic geography, general
economic history, problems of economics in Mexico and Latin America,
modern systems of economics, and archeology. He will reside at Guatemala 531,
Froc. Las Americas, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico,

GHP
August 11, 1969

koe Tyas Soxccn

Raider bscckur Neves

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

Iris Solomon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Solomon, is one of 23
students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Solomon resides at 362 Collins Avenue, Mt. Vernon.

She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in history.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Solomon will be taking 17 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are Latin American history, Mexican
history III, archeology, constitutional rights, logic, and a seminar on the
literature of the state of Jalisco. She will reside at Avenida La Paz 2uh8,
Colonia Reforma, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

titi

August 11, 1969 Yor We que

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Ag 3 . 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

TMMEDIATE

Sharon Singer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Singer, is one of
23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by the
Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969

to January, 1970. Miss Singer resides at 83-23 160th Street, Jamaica.

She is a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in Italian.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability
to speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also
selected according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and
their willingness to represent their university and country in a
different cultural setting.

Miss Singer will be taking 12 semester hours at the University of
Guadalajara. Included in her courses are Mexican literature, Spanish
etymology, Mexican history, and logic. She will reside at Avenida La Paz
2448, Colonia Reforma, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico.

itt
August 11, 1969

ee Long Telamti Rais

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

Madeline Raciti, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Raciti, is one
of 23 students from State University of New York at Albany selected by
the Center of Inter-American Studies to participate in the semester abroad
program at the University of Guadalajara in Mexico from September, 1969 to

January, 1970. Miss Raciti resides at uk Terrace Avenue, Albany. She is

a Spanish major at SUNYA with a second field in French.

The Center for Inter-American Studies at SUNYA selects students
according to their previous academic achievements and their ability to
speak, comprehend, write and read Spanish. Students are also selected
according to their interest in a study-abroad experience and their
willingness to represent their university and country in a different
cultural setting.

Miss Raciti will be taking 14 semester hours at the University of Guadalajara.
Included in her courses are Spanish etymology, a seminar on the literature
of the state of Jalisco, archeology, history of religions, and history of
Mexican art. She will reside at Calle del Rayo 2364, Entre Arcos y Paseo
de la Arboleda, Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico,

aHHE
August 11, 1969

to “Tiss. Moran
Rivicklobeckas News

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
& e q i “a STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
da & we a H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Ditector )

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

IMMEDIATE

More than 2, 400 students will attend the 1969 Summer Planning Conference at State
University of New York at Albany. The conference, initiated in 1964, will involve seven
three-day sessions for freshmen and four two-day orientation periods for transfer students
during the weeks of July 1 - August 16.

Dr. Sorrell E. Chesin, associate dean of students, said that the conference is being
expanded this year to include a full orientation program for an estimated 1, 800 freshmen
and 600 transfer students, Edward Bazinet, residence hall director, is serving as
coordinator for the conference,

The program involves faculty, administration and students, Staff members are
responsible for a variety of activities including academic advisement, counseling and
discussion sessions, registration, and other official functions, Much of the program is
administered and conducted by university students who are selected as conference ,
assistants,

Approximately 250 freshmen will attend each of the seven conference sessions and
125 transfer students will attend each of four transfer sessions, The program includes
opportunity for a variety of informal! social and recreational activities.

There is a special program for parents and guests of students, which includes an
opportunity to meet with principal university officials. Dr. Clifton C. Thorne, vice
president for student affairs, and Dr, Robert Morris, dean of the University College,
officially welcome parents at the opening convocation. Campus tours also are provided,

(Editors: Enclosed are lists of freshmen, transfer students, and
conference assistants from your area, )

SRA aK KK

August 13, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Summer Planning Conference
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
July 30, - August 1, 1969

Steven Atlas 9 Eva Lane Plainview
Sandra Alescio 114 Broad Street Albany
Robert Avens 1 Oakland Avenue Deer Park
Nancy Bandiera 25 Delaware Terrace Albany
Charles Barbuti 7 Long Drive Liberty
Maribeth Barney 6 Lindsay Avenue Wyandanch
Frank Barone 3 Sherwood Avenue Rensselaer
Robin Bartow 21 Jay Court Northport
Mark Batien 741 Moover Avenue Peekskill
David Beals 5 Bauer Drive Albany
Susan Beckerle 24 Prospect Drive Glens Falls
Eric Berger 12 Cedar Drive Plainview
Jill Binder 915 East Seventh Street Brooklyn
Barbara Blanck 29 Flower Road Valley Stream
Steven Blum 3149 Wilmarth Place Wantagh
Dorothy Bose 115 Shurbhollow Road Rosyln
Aaron Bousel 126 Seton Drive New Rochelle
JoAnn Bronschidle 381 Young Street Tonawanda
Carole Brummer 89 Trefalger Square Lynbrook
Brenda Burg 120 Whitney Street Syracuse
James Butterworth Union Avenue M.D, 27 Newburgh
Denise Carrier 55 North Road Tivoli
Anthony Cheh 64-40 214th Street Oakland Gardens
Katherine Ciak 2924 St. Paul Blvd. Rochester
Marc Cohen 5 Holly Drive Syossett
Steven Cohen 9 Melben Court Planiveiw
DCharles Comerford #78 N. Rte. 303 Congers
Christine Cooney 150 Clington Street White Plains
Christine Daly 23 Summit Street Huntington
Felice Darwin 147-15 256 Street Rosedale
Barry Davis 2 216th Street Brooklyn
Keeneth Deane 102-40 62nd Avenue Forest Hills
Michael DellaRocco 946 Harrison Avenue Schenectady

Thomas Deschene
Helen De Thomas

55 Ferris Lane
Box 48 R.D, #1

Poughkeepsie
Alexandria Bay

Sara Dinzes 211 West Hudson Street ong Beach
Jacqueline DiSalvo R.D, #1 Box 156 Phoenix
Kathleen Doyle 20 Loderdale Road Rochester
Kathleen Eckerle Morningside Avenue Palisades
Joyce Eichenauer Box 114 Little York
Michael Ellenberg 114-10 72nd Drive Flushing
David Finn 37 Juracka Parkway Schenectady
Salwatore Fiola 14 Ross Avenue So, Nyack

Connie Muvsit

59 Bounty Lane

Jericho
Sheila Gibbons
Nora Gibson
Barry Glaser
Isabel Goldberg
Mitchell Goldfarb
Jay Goldman
Susan Goldman
Howard Goldblatt
Mark Gorsetman
Walter Gross
Laura Gureso
John Hannifin
Michael Hass
Jonathan Heller
Lawrence Herzog
Robert Hoffman
Leroy Hogeboom
Glenn Hoggard
Penni Hollander
Nancy Huddart
Rhonda Hugenbruch
Louis Hyman
Frances Imbesi
James Ioli

Lisa Kalefsky
Steven Kaminshine
David Kaplan
Howard Karpel
Barbara Kaufman
Steven Kaye
Susan Kellman
Alice Kenny
Nancy Klem
Frederic Kneller
Virginia Kotoucek
John Kozlowski
Melinda Krieger
Paul Kula

Selene Kushner
Gary Labuzetta
Sallie Landt
Richard Larris
Catherine Lavigne
Cindy Lebow
Warren LeGare
Brian Lehrer
Jane Leinwhol

«Bm

65 Bridle Path

93 Johnson Road

1935 Shore Parkway
1407 Ocean Parkway
711 Montauk Court
1836 East 18th Street
697 Pleasantview Court
2055 Grand Concourse
1711 Moris Avenue
3617 Alameda Lane

3 Marilyn Avenue
42-02 212th Street

897 East 56th Street

4 Island Court

11 Lauren Avenue, South
R.D. 2 Box 104

27 Union Street

965 Tinton Avenue
54-20 Kissena Blvd,
76 Violet Street

22 Laureldale Drive
44 Shortridge Drive
446 Eleventh Street
708 Sterling Street
2954 David Place

2891 Montomgery Street
1502 Earl Road

1 Jefferson Avenue
212 N. Boston Avenue
32-20 92 Street

1138 East Ninth Street
49 Munson Lane

RD,

2067 Harrison Avenue
874 Colridge Road
1355 Van Cortland Street
7 Brookdale Road

21 Elm Street

900 Avenue "'N"

38 Blake Street

151 Woodcrest Blvd.
90 Union Street

46 Church Hill Road
30-11 Dwight Avenue
Hilton Road

29-06 210 Street

90 Knightsbridge Road

Williamsville
Watervliet
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Yorktown Hts.
Bronx

Bronx
Endwell
Amityville
Bayside
Brooklyn
Port Washington
Deer Park
Newfield
Cobleskill
Bronx
Flushing
Massapequa
Pittsford
Mineola
Schenectady
North Bellmore
Seaford
Wantagh
Wantagh
Rockville Centre
N. Massapequa
Jackson Hts.
Brooklyn
West Sayville
Aurora

Bronx
Wantagh
Schenectady
Glen Cove
Allegany
Brooklyn
Newburgh
Kenmore

New Rochelle
Waterford
Far Rockaway
Syingerlands
Bayside

Great Neck
Jocelyn Levine
Alan Lichtenstein
Jay Lukowski
Jerome Macek
Elizabeth Majewska
Laura Mandelson
John McCall
Harold Mendelsohn
Robert Merkel
Scott Meyer

Drag ke Michno
Margaret Mitchell
Carol Moor
Judith Morgan
Leonard Moss
Michael Nayer
Stanley Nitzberg
Steven Nover

Leo O'Connor
John Okazki
Janet Olson
Barbara Orrok
Timothy Owens
Joseph Packman
Virginia Paine
Pamela Paone
Bruce Petchesky
Janice Pinchot
Yves Pinkowitz
Lawrence Pohl
Denise Preziosi
Virginia Quesada
Gail Rathbun
David Ressler
Gary Ricciardi
Marian Riedesel
Wendy Reipe
Carla Roeper
Mark Rokeach
Joseph Romano
Richard Rose
Alane Rosen
Diann Rosenbaum
Donna Rosentreter
Paul Sadowski
Susan Saunders
Karl Schabinger

wl Sen

35 Lakeside Drive
236 Beach 30th Street
1684 Morris Avenue
R.D. #6

253 Orange Street

20 Blossom Circle
R.D, #1

N. Joyce Avenue
4564 Dewey Avenue
386 Woodbridge Lane
491 Payne Avenue
12960 Main Street
229 Phyllis Drive
918 Lock Street

2937 Voorhies Avenue

2020 Avenue O

2940 West Sth Street
1315 Forest Avenue
31 Lockrow Blvd.

8 Century Road
2729 Yale Street

79 North Avenue

1 Delaware Avenue
3115 Avenue I

853 Vischer Avenue

New Yorker (West) R.D. #3

1429 Sylvan Lane
1795 Riverside Drive
123-35 82nd Road
122 Hartford Avenue
106 Beverly Road

31 Cumberland Avenue

131 State Street

330 West Beech Street
47 Audubon Avenue
Academy Street

581 Grimm Place

375 East Hoffman Avenue

4 Tipton Drive

41 Main Street

2015 Shore Parkway
116 Roxbury Road
1450 Crown Street
520 Ridgemont Drive
435-Seventh Avenue
4 Parkwood Drive

1 Crestview Avenue

Rockville Centre
Far Rockaway
Bronx
Amsterdam
Albany

East Rochester
Hammondsport
Amittyville
Rochester
Jericho

N. Tonawanda
Alden
Lindenhurst
Phoenix
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Brooklyn
Baldwin
Albany

Bronx
Endicott
Staten Island
Troy
Brooklyn
Schenectady
Seneca

East Meadow
Bronx

Kew Gardens
Kenmore
White Plains
Great Neck
Seneca Falls
Long Beach
Binghamton
Estfield
Baldwin
Lindenhurst
Loudonville
Ravena
Brooklyn

So, Franklin Square
Wantagh
Rochester
Watervliet
Burnt Hills
Troy
Stanton Schneider
Michael Schur

T. Robert Schwartz
Cynthia Scott
David Seligmann
Val Serbalik
Richard Shapiro
Pamela Scheck
Anne Slywiak
Tina Sommer
Gail Steiner

John Stewart
Carolyn Sundstrom
Larry Supnick
Jean Taylor
Mare Temkion
Barbara Thomas
Susan Tilchen
Barry Tillis
Mark Vaccacio
Harold VanAllen
Penny Virginia
Teresa Vivacqua
Larry Wahl
Donna Weagley
Robert Weinberger
Howard Weiss
Daniel Williams
Bruce Wollaber
Donald Wood
Donna Wright
Michael Zabinski
Charles Zarahn
Victoria Zeldin
Michael Zostant

-4-

2905 Kent Road East
23 Pinetree Road
Highmont Avenue

64 Tremaine Avenue
3525 Woodward Street
42 N. Main Street
524 Surrey Place

60 Hoover Street

247 Seymour Street
3845 Sedgwick Avenue
115-33 228 Street
Box 314

Roscoe

1116 Bay 32nd Street
412 McCall Road

14 University Drive
275 Belmont Court, W.
2829 Whaleneck Drive
194-11 Station Road
2574 Stedman Place
R.D. Box 63

1305 East 18th Street
132 West Main Street
R.D. 2

612 McKinley Street
15 Aberfyle Road
2852 Saw Mill Road
1-9 West Franklin Street
R.D. 1 Cobleskill
Box 6995

Box 314

870 warren Street
2010 Riverside Drive
463 Ridge Road

18 Amboy Drive

Wantagh
Westbury
Upper Nyack
Kenmore
Oceanside
Mechanicville
Oceanside
Orangeburg
Auburn

Bronx
Cambria Heights
Morrisville
Roscoe

Far Rockaway
Rochester
Port Jefferson Station
N, Tonawanda
Merrick
Flushing
Bronx
Kingston
Brooklyn
Frankfort
Lyons

East Rochester
New Rochelle
Wantagh
Endicott
Cobleskill
Northville
Woodbourns
Albany
Wantagh
Hartsdale
Albany
Transfer Summer Planning Conference
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

William Ambrozik
Gladys Ames
Richard Arnold
Barbara Balkin
John Basal
Deborah Beecher
Howard Belinsky
Nancy Bell

Stuart Bell

Sarah Bennett
Hilda Birney
Jernon Bowen
Anthony Brandong
Norman Brosterman
MacArthur Brumfield
Royson Carney
Richard Carver
Angela Cicero
Russell Cook
David Coveney
Patricia Crampton
Howard Culver
Frank DeSorbo
William Dibble
Jeanette DiNapoli
Judith Dixon
Diane Duprey
Mark Eoweig
Michelle Ferm
Joseph Foulke
Melvin Gearing
Carol Gerstman
Iris Gold

Ellen Goldstein
Corinne Haines
Lorilyn Harland
Charles Harris
Barbara Heikoff
Marc Heppen
Bonnie Herman
Patricia Hollis
Christine Huba
Carol Huber
Christine Hughes
Ruthanne Hurd

July 28 ~ 29, 1969

1491 McClellan Street
Porter Road

Warner Gulf Road

30 Jolen Drive

1002 Johnson Street
30 East Bayberry Road
3647 Carlisle Road
228 South Main Avenue
22-60 79 Street

44 Massapequa Avenue
141 Ontario Street

200 Green Street, Apt. 4A
50 Division Street
1936 Stuart Street
2977 Webster Avenue
Main Street

32 River Street

50 Canal Street

202 Broadway

956 Lynn Drive

34 Hooper Road

2 Circle Drive

9 Marshall Street
R.D. #1 Box 122

114 Copleigh Drive
365 South Seventh Street
Mooers

199-23 28 Avenue

94 Maple Avenue

70 Saratoga Street

7 Woodbridge Avenue
65-59 Parsons Blvd.
215 Burtis Avenue

34 Morris Road

R.D. #2

46 Willow Avenue

22 Maple Avenue

1 Coronet Court

67-76 Austin Street
71-50 Parson's Blvd,
43 Delaware Street .
26 Sycamore Street
420 Stinard Avenue
2543 Nelson Road
297-18th Street

Schenectady
Medina
Holland
Hillsdale, N.J.
Elmira
Glenmont
Wantagh
Albany
Jackson Hts,
Massapequa
Albany
Albany
Catskill
Brooklyn
Bronx
Wadsworth
Hoosick Falls
Fort Edward
Fort Edward
Valley Streem
Endwell
Jamestown
Albany
Vernon
Syracuse
Lewistown
Mooers
Flushing
Voorheesville
Yonkers
Chatham
Flushing
Rockville Centre
Spring Valley
Homer
Williamson
Lackawanna
Schenectady
Forest Hills
Flushing
Cooperstown
Albany
Syracuse
Cazenovia
West Babylon
Charles Izzo
Morton Jackson
Stacey Jarit
Patricia Jeff
Lawrence Jones
Thomas Kalinowski
Pamela Kast
Donna Kefkowitz
Karen Koerner
Edward Klimkewicz
Joan Kosby
Jeffrey Kreisberg
Nathan Kullman
Joseph LaFave
Susan Lagasse
Larry Levy
Thomas Lithgow
Eric Lonschein
Martha Lynch
David Magit

nancy Mariotti
Edward Mark
Linda Marshall
William Matt
William McCann
Gary McDowell
Dorothy McKenzie
James McMullen
Peter Moore
Michael Morgan
Lee Kathryn Mudar
K. Marian Mudar
Jonathan Munves
Francine Nachaman
Mary Nalenti
Lance Nelson
Anthony Nero
Kenneth Neuhauser
Wendy Nielsen
Edith Norton
James O'Connell
Susan Oilman
Sandra Oliveri
Jeffrey Opal
Richard Papa
David Peck

Ann Pittman

Transfers
“Qe

92 North Pearl Street
204 Hackett Blvd.
224-22 Strongh urst Avenue
2319 Graham Avenue
164 Spring Street

98 Franklin Street
341 West Bank Street
67-74 Springfield Blvd.
13 Wedgewood Drive
26 Homestead Drive
2 Maymont Lane

126 Linden Avenue
153 Murray Drive
Route #2

38 Belle Avenue
2410 Barker Avenue
418 East Street

14 Anewood Drive
R.D. #2

33-25 90 Street

R.D. #1 Box 25

4 Shelley Avenue

7 Beardsley Lane
1870 Ferguson Street
3962 Clark Street
R.D, #2

A-2 Goldbas Apts.
388 Morris Street

98 West Kirkwood Avenue
Little Delaware
Maple Road

Maple Road

26 Hunter Drive

2212 Brighman Street
26 Skyview Drive

17 Dana Avenue
Joslen Boulevard
3023 Judith Drive
Hunters Lane

29 Hill Street

1 Tarleton Court

139 Payson Avenue
89 Afton Street

5 Careson Lane

38 Fuller Terrace
545Neptune Avenue
21 Forest Road

Mechanicutte
Albany
Queens Village
Yorkville
Ossining
Patchoque
Albion
Bayside
West Seneca
Newtonville
Stony Brook
Lynbrook
Delmar
Winthrop
Troy

New York
Renesselaer
Commack
Andover
Queens
Scotia
Yonkers
Huntington
Schenectady
Seaford
Port Byron
Utica
Albany
Merrick
Delhi
Voorheesville
Voorheesville
Eastchester
Brooklyn
Cohoes
Albany
Hudson
Merrick
Elmsford
Alplaus
Plattsburgh
New York
Rochcester
Albany
Albany
Brooklyn
Delmar
Thomas Quigley
Anne Raeihle
Donald Rauz
Vick Ray
John Redmond”
Sister Mary Angelita Remias
Gerard King
Patricia Rodgers
Jay Rosenberg
Robert O. Rossi
Paul Ruffer
Thomas Saccone
Dennis Schrader
Douglas Schwartz
Steven Seidenfeld
Mindy Sheldon
Lily Shung
Cheryl Siegel
Marvin Siegel
Joe Silvestro
Susan Singer
Tully Slayton
E, Alexander Spern
Andrea Spiegel
Michael Spindler
Catherine Stetts
Anne Stevason
Debra Swalm
Sue Swartz
Michael Syracuse
Roger Taft
Warren Tatler
Ann Tierney
Bonita Tripi
Richard Vertigan
Maren Walter
Paul Weissman
Scheryl Wettig
Donald Whiting
Martin Whitman
Stephen Wiadyka
Katheleen Willyard
Gary Wright

Transfers
age

59 Glen Avenue

25 Haven Avenue
Martindale Trailer Court #75
28 North Highland Avenue
2336 15th Street

755 Madison Avenue
R.D. #1 Hillsdale Ave.
19 Highland Drive

72-81 113 Street

233 12th Street

1667 Euclid Avenue

401 Newcastle Road

47 West Main Street

840 East 51 Street
226-37 Manor Road

7600 Ridge Road

60 Linden Court

6 Oakleaf Court

1871 East 31 Street

1410 Stonybrook Avenue
30 Brand Drive

3176 Grand Concourse
35-55 735 Street

54 Oxford Blvd.

563 New Hempstead Road
157-13, 92 Greet

654-75 Street

41 Brackett Drive

2 Bryant Place

94 Harding Avenue

R.D. #4

12 North Elmhurst Avenue
1023 Lexington Avenue
Box 275 Brant-Reservation Rd,
110 Trent Lane

R.D, #2

3155 Grand Concourse

22 Jon Michael Terrace
26 May Street

297 Bleecker Street

6 Winding Road

51 Lockrow Avenue

9747 Woodlawn Avenue

Amsterdam
Valley Stream
Mechanicville
Ossining
Troy

Albany (Chicago)
Warwick
Corning
Forest Hills
Schenectady
Syracuse
Syracuse
Clifton Springs
Brooklyn
Queens Village
Brockport
Roslyn Hts.
Huntington
Brooklyn
Mamaroneck
Huntington
Bronx
Jackson Hts,
Great Neck
Spring Valley
Howard Beack
Brooklyn
Kenmore
Fredonia
Delmar
Amsterdam
Albany
Schenectady
Brant
Camillus
Rexford
Bronx

Albany

Glens Falls
Gloversville
Hicksville
Albany

So, Glens Falls
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

Dr, John W, Saunders, Jr., professor of biological sciences, State
University of New York at Albany, has received $40, 500 from the National
Science Foundation for continuation of his study entitled '"Ectoderm-Mesoderm

Interactions in Development,'' In 1967 he received an $80, 000 NSF grant to

support his work.

Dr, Saunders came to Albany in 1967 from the University of Pennsylvania.
He previously taught at Marquette University and at the University of Chicago.
He is agraduate of the University of Oklahoma and received his doctorate from

Johns Hopkins University.
FRO OK

August 13, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
S Uj NWA 4 E W S STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. Dayid Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 * 03
IMMEDIATE

Dr. H. Craig Sipe, professor of science education, State University of New York
at Albany,has received a grant of $110, 000 from the U. S. Office of Education, The
award, effective September 1, 1969 to August 31, 1971, will be used to fund a fellow-
ship program for training community college science teachers.

The program is made up of five components. They are graduate work leading to the
M.S. degree, or its equivalent, in a science discipline; an internship in teaching one of
the sciences to freshmen or sophomores; seminars and course work in science teaching;
experience with instructional research and development at the community college level;
and completion of the requirements for an educational specialist certificate as defined
by the department of instruction, School of Education, SUNYA.

Dr. Sipe joined the Albany faculty in 1967, He is a former president and life member
of the National Association for Research in Science Teaching. He taught at a number
of institutions before coming to SUNYA, most recently at George Peabody, Nashville,
Tenn. The educator has written many articles for professional publications. He holds
degrees from Bethany College, University of Virginia, and Peabody.

Hake

August 13, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
4 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

Vincent O'Leary, professor of criminal justice at the School of Criminal Justice,
State University of New York at Albany, has been appointed to a nation-wide "Criminal
Justice Data File and Statistic System" project.

California, Arizona, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota and New York have received
grants from the United States Department of Justice in order to develop a model system
for nation-wide use. The 14-month project will run through August 1970.

‘The project. has two principal objectives; namely, to develop and demonstrate that
a computerized criminal offender file, containing data from all segments of criminal
justice, can be standardized and exchanged between states on a timely basis; and, to
computerize current statistical records and explore the feasibility of developing various
statistical series and meaningful research data directly from computerized offender
files. Professor O'Leary, who joined the Albany faculty last year, recently was
appointed by U.S, Attorney General John Mitchell to a 12-member National Advisory
Committee to the Law Enforcement Education Program (LEEP).

SHS
August 21, 1969

Home Address: 113 Berwick Drive, Elsmere

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

Nathaniel A. Friedman, associ prbtéssot of*mathematics, States University of
New York at Albany, is the recipient of a $13, 600 two-year grant from the National
Science Foundation. The award will support his research in "Topics in Ergodic
Theory."

Dr. Friedman is the author of the book, "Basic Calculus," published in January
1968 by Scott, Foresman, and Company. Being prepared now for publication by
Van Nostraud, is another book, "Introduction to Ergodic Theory,'' The mathematician
also is the author of several articles which have appeared in professional journals.

Prior to joining the faculty at the Albany university last year, Dr, Friedman
was visiting lecturer for a year at Westfield College at the University of London.
Earlier he had been assistant professor of mathematics for three years at the University
of New Mexico. He is an alumnus of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. He holds
graduate degrees from the University of Michigan and from Brown University where he
received his doctorate in 1964.

JS
August 21, 1969

Home Address: 33-22 Latham Village Lane, Latham.

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
# =F 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

Raymond J. Spenard, programmer for the planning and development office at
State University of New York at Albany, has been selected to conduct the Industrial
Education Institute's llth annual international Value Engineering Seminar and Product
Analysis Workshop in London during the month of September. Mr, Spenard will be
assisted by a team of international value engineering authorities in presenting five
days of instruction, demonstration, case study, and idea exchange in the cost reduction
philosophy and techniques of value engineering and analysis.

The Industrial Education Institute, with headquarters in Boston and offices in seven
| overseas countries, is a recognized authority in the educational field for development of
more effective utilization of technical and management personnel throughout industry.
Through a wide variety of activities the institute has helpd more than 20, 000 men represent-

ing over 5, 000 companies, introduce and implement programs that reduce costs, increase

production, or improve quality and performance.

Mr. Spenard, prior to joining the staff of the planning and development office at the
university, was a value development coordinator at Watervliet Arsenal for the U.S. Govern-
ment. In that capacity he served as a consultant in value analysis education and training
at military installations and industrial concerns throughout the country. He was instrumental

in instituting the VE/VA cost reduction program in the Department of the Army.

ARIE ITE

|
|
|
|
|

August 21, 1969

Home Address; 12 Overlook Avenue, RD 1, Cohoes.

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

Twenty-two faculty promotions have been announced at State University of New York
at Albany. The include eight named as full professors; ten, as associate professors;
and four, as assistant professors.

Promoted to full professors have been Thomas Barker, history; Vincent J. Aceto,
library science; Hugh Gordon, mathematics; Hyman Kuritz, education; Edward Sipay,
education; Thomas J, O'Connor, art; William H.: Wilson, art, and Mojmir J. Frinta, art.

Newly-named associate professors are Pong S. Lee, economics, Joseph A. Steger,
psychology; Ghislane Gouraige, romance languages; Charles Koban, English;

Eugene Mirabelli, Jr., English; Carlos A. Astiz, political science; Alvin Magid,
political science; J. Laurence Farrell, music; Benjamin E. Chi, physics; Ronald Ley,
education,

Promoted to the rank of assistant professor have been Patricia Snyder, speech; 3
Patricia A. Rogers, physical education; Alfred E, Tong, mathematics; Joe W. Jenkins,
mathematics.

peta

August 21, 1969

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

Final arrangements are being made for non-credit courses to be offered this fall
by the College of General Studies at State University of New York at Albany. Among the
courses are those concerned with politics, graphics, and reading.

The course in town and country politics will be held on mieiy evenings from Septem-
ber 9 to October 28. It will consist of lectures, discussions, reading assignments, and
visiting lecturers.

Practicing politicians will be included in the list of guest speakers, The course is
designed to give a better understanding of the American political scene and an insight into
the political processes with emphasis on local government. It will be limited to 30 people.
Professor James A, Riedel of the Graduate School of Public Affairs at SUNYA will teach
the eight-session seminar. Tuition is $20.

The course in graphics, a studio course, will meet Tuesday and Thursday evenings
for 14 weeks. The instructor, Robert M. Cartmell, holds a master's degree in fine arts
from the University of Iowa, and was the recipient of the James Nelson Raymond Fellow-
ship in 1961. He has exhibited in Chicago, where he had a one-man show, in Iowa City,
and in San Diego. His work is included in private collections in Boston, Chicago, New York,
Tunisia, Jamaica and Australia.

In addition to the traditional techniques in lithography there will be emphasis in silk-
screen and woodcut. The course is open to beginners and enrollment is limited to 20
students. Registration for the 28 sessions will be $40.

The six-session non-credit reading improvement course begins September 23. The
instructor will be Mrs. M. Elizabeth Tibbetts.

(more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
From: State University of New York at Albany (2)
Non-Credit Courses

The workshop, to be held Tuesdays from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m,, will include practice
with reading machines, perception exercises, vocabulary improvement, directed reading
with emphasis on finding main ideas, skimming, scanning, retention of facts, and
getting the most out of printed material.

A tuition fee of $20 will be charged and enrollment will be limited to 20 students.
The course will be given again on October 28.

Individuals who would like to register for the courses should write to SUNYA,
College of General Studies, 1400 Washington Avenue, Albany 12203, or call 457-4937
for information.

seo

August 21, 1969
aad’ .

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

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901» 02 » 03
IMMEDIATE
Eugene Mirabelli, Jr., associate professor of English at State University of

| New York at Albany, has received a grant from The Rockefeller Foundation to provide
him with an uninterrupted period of writing. The $5, 000 award, to be given to him
through the State University Foundation, Inc., will be used toward Professor Mirabelli's
living and professional expenses,

The writer's latest work, now in progress, was begun under a faculty fellowship
from the Research Foundation of State University of New York last year. Dr. Mira-

} belli is the author of two novels, ''The Way In," published by Viking Press, New York,

in 1968, and by Chatto and Windus, London publishers, in 1969, and ''The Burning Air,"
published by Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, ten years ago, and by Hutchinson Litd.,
London, the following year.

At the university the author has taught courses in creative writing, freshmen
composition, English literature, English and American poetry, the American novel
} between two world wars, and a graduate course on Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Faulkner.

Last year, in a New York Times book review, Martin Levin wrote: "His Style is

| _ epigrammatic and fragmentary -- but the picture he creates is surprisingly complete."
He described the work as a ''virtuoso performance" and added, ''Juxtaposed with a fine
sense of esthetic order are images out of his hero's past, a casual view of postgraduate
| Cambridge, and a glimmering of a man's future."
In The Saturday Review, Granville Hicks described Professor Mirabelli's second

'

| novel as good". Earlier he had written that the author's first work showed a sensitivit:
& NE

| (more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
From; State University of New York at Albany

Professor Eugene Mirabelli

and discipline and a feeling for language. Wrote Mr. Hicks, ''As in 'The Burning Air’,
Mirabelli's style is so gentle, so free from any straining for effect, apparently so
guileless, that the reader suddenly discovers with astonishment that this is a work

Of ari.

Professor Mirabelli joined the Albany faculty four years ago. He is an alumnus
of Harvard College and received a Master of Arts in writing from John Hopkins
University. In 1964 he received his Doctor of Philosophy from Harvard University.
His dissertation was entitled ''The Apprenticeship of William Faulkner: The Early
Short Stories and the First Three Novels".

serleseseok se
August 27, 1969

Home Address: 60 Adams Place, Delmar
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

Arnolds Grava, professor of Romance languages at State University of New York at
Albany, is the author of a new book, ''A Structural Inquiry into the Symbolic Representation
of Ideas,"’ just published by Mouton, with offices in The Hague and Paris. -The main pur-
pose of the volume is to inquire into the realm of the symbolic representation of man's
knowledge which consists of ideas or concepts,

Professor Grava, whose special fields are French, philosophy, and general linguistics
joined the Albany university faculty in 1954. He holds degrees from the University of Lille,
France; the University of Riga, Latvia; and from the University of Nebraska where he
received his doctorate. He has been the recipient of a Ford Foundation scholarship, a
State University of New York Research fellowship, and a Danforth Foundation grant, His
writings have been published in several professional journals.

Dr. Grava's latest work covers the functional and structural aspects of concepts as
vehicles of the symbolic representation arising from the creative energy or activity of the
human mind. He has indicated that both the purpose and the scope of the book were
prompted and determined by recent developments of modern science, particularly in
cybernetics, which, according to Professor Grava, have made it imperative to view all
problems concerning matter or energy in their correlation with philosophy. The central
idea of the volume, expressed by a simple analogy between the structure of an atom and
that of a symbol-concept, is further based upon the ever increasing scientific evidence
which makes the clear-cut decision between mind and matter obsolete.

At the university Professor Grava teaches general linguistics for all language majors,

advanced language in French, and graduate seminars on Diderot and Baudelair. He is the

(more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Brom: State University of New York at Albany

Professor Arnolds Grava, Page 2

co-author of ''Diderot Studies," published in Switzerland in 1963. Additionally,
Professor Grava has been in charge of the French language examination for the
master of arts degree and for a doctor of philosophy candidates from other departments.

Currently he is supervising three doctoral candidates in French.

es

August 27, 1969

Home Address: 270 Washington Avenue, Albany
|
|
|

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

Arthur A. Hitchcock, who has been serving as director of the Two-Year
College Development Center of State University of New York at Albany, will
assume the chairmanship of the Department of Guidance and Personnel Services
in the School of Education in September. He succeeds J, Maxson Reeves who has
asked to be relieved of the position in order to return to teaching. Dr. Reeves
served as department chairman for five years.

Dr. Hitchcock joined the Albany faculty three years ago after serving for
ten years as executive director of the American Personnel and Guidance Association.
Long recognized as a leader in his field, he previously held several positions in
public and higher education, including posts at the University of Nebraska, Harvard
Graduate School of Education, and New England public schools.

Professor Hitchcock, an alumnus of Wesleyan University, holds graduate
degrees from Harvard, and from Yale University where he received his doctoral
degree. He is a member of several guidance and personnel organizations and, in
1965-66, he served on former Vice President Hubert Humphrey's Task Force on
Dropouts.

FRSC
August 27, 1969

Home Address: 393 Highland Drive, Schenectady

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

One of the world's leading plant physiologists, Noburo Kamiya, a professor
at Osaka University, Japan, will be at State University of New York at Albany
during the coming year. Dr. Kamiya, as visiting professor of biology, will lecture
to undergraduate and graduate students at the university as well as at other State
University of New York institutions.

While at State University at Albany during the 1969-70 year, Dr. Kamiya also
will participate in research in cell physiology, take part in seminars, and give
laboratory instruction. His work on the analysis of cytoplasmic streaming using
Nitella cells and slime molds now is included in many textbooks of physiology as
the outstanding work for analysis of streaming mechanisms in plant cells,

The distinguished biologist was nominated by the Albany University for a
National Science Foundation Senior Foreign Scientists Fellowship in its department
of biological sciences. His salary will be paid through The Research Foundation of
State University of New York, partial support for which is provided by the NSF award
for $14,190. His appointment is for the academic year October 1, 1969, through
July 31, 1970.

se aka ae

August 27, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
oo ery

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

University of the Air fall semester courses, which include American history,
basic astronomy and beginning German, will be broadcast Saturday and Sunday
afternoons and weekday evenings on eight television stations throughout New York
State. Credit students may register through any one of 15 participating State
University units, They are State University of New York at Albany; State University
Colleges at Brockport, Buffalo, Fredonia, Plattsburgh, and Oswego; Corning,
Dutchess, Hudson Valley, Nassau, Onondaga, Rockland, and Westchester Community
Colleges; State University of New York Maritime College; and Agricultural and Tech-
nical College at Alfred. Participating stations are WNDT Channel 13, New York City;
WMHT Channel 17, Schenectady; WCNY-TV Channel 24, Syracuse; WXXI Channel 21,
Rochester; WNED-TV Channel 17, Buffalo; WPTZ Channel 5, Plattsburgh; WNYC-TV
Channel 31, New York City; and WLIW Channel 21, Garden City, L. I.

State University at Albany offers three hours of academic credit for successfully
completing Rise of the American Nation (history) and Eye on the Universe (astronomy).
The former will be telecast by WMHT Saturdays 1:30 - 2:30 p.m. and 3-4 p.m, and
the latter on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, 6:30 - 7 p.m.

A University of the Air catalog providing full details on broadcast schedules,
course offerings, participating campuses, tuition and enrollment procedures is avail-

able from Univair, P.O, Box 4440, Grand Central Station, New York, New York.

August 27, 1969

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

Nathali a i i
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS ee ae

IMMEDIATE

Jai Soo Kim, professor of atmospheric science and physics, State University
of New York at Albany, has been named chairman of the department of atmospheric
sciences. He joined the faculty in 1967 after having taught for several years at the
University of Idaho.

Professor Kim last year was the recipient of a $71, 000 grant from the National
Science Foundation for research entitled, ''A Study of Aurora and Related Phenomena,"
His current research will extend over a two-year period during which he will observe
the aurora with two light sensing devices, called photometers, one at Whiteface Mountain,
and the other at Green Bank, West Virginia.

The new department chairman studied at Preparatory College, Keijo Imperial
University, Korea, before attending the Seoul National University where he received
his Bachelor of Science in physics in 1949. He continued his studies later at the Uni-
versity of Saskatchewan in Canada. He holds a Master of Science’ in physics and
doctoral degree, also in physics, from the University of Saskatchewan. He has
lectured at academic institutions in Korea, served as a research assistant in the
physics department at the University of Saskatchewan, and taught at Clarkson College,
Potsdam, He was on the faculty of the University of Idaho for eight years. Many of
his articles have been published in professional journals.

sks
August 29, 1969

Home Address: 3068 Lydius Street, Schenectady

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

Rossell Hope Robbins, internationally known as an authority on Medieval
English verse, has been appointed to the English department of the College of
Arts and Sciences at State University of New York at Albany. He formerly was
research professor at the University of California at Riverside, California.

Professor Robbins, who has a doctorate from Cambridge University in
England, is the author of many published works in his field. Considered out-
standing among his books and numerous articles are ''Historical Poems of the
XIV and XV Centuries''(1959), "Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology"

(1959), "Early English Christmas Carols'' (1961), ''The Hundred Tales: Les
Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles" (1962), and "Supplement to the Index of Middle Eng-
lish Verse" (1965), of which he is co-author.

Professor Robbins has taught or has held administrative positions at Cambridge
University, University of California, Duke University, University of North Carolina,
Mount Allison University at New Brunswick, and Sir George Williams University
at Montreal. He also has been guest lecturer at Northwestern University, State
University of New York Upstate Medical Center at Syracuse, and at the universities
of Berlin, London, and Salzburg.

sek ea

August 29, 1969

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

George W. Putnam, associate professor of geology, State University of New York
at Albany, is the recipient of a $36, 400 grant from the National Science Foundation to
support his work in petrology and geochemistry of igneous and metamorphic rocks,
particularly with respect to metal distribution and the genesis of mineralization and ores.

Professor Putnam is studying the metal distribution, alteration, and petrogenesis
of the Superior stock located in Plumas County, California. Stock is a body of igneous
rock, which intruded upward into older ere in ground plans is roughly
circular or elliptical in cross section may increase downward. In the Superior stock,
samples from a large number of well distributed drill cores may be obtained for research
purposes. The project, for which the scientist isthe principal investigator, is being under
taken to develop from a number of rock properties potentially available from the core,
supplemented by minor surface sampling, information to provide a three-dimensional
petrogenetic model for the stock. It will involve a relatively large number of analyses by
atomic absorption for metals such as copper, lead zinc, and silver, and x-ray spectro-
graphic analysis of bulk rock samples, and x-ray diffraction of analysis of rock alteration
effects. The research will be conducted with the cooperation of the California Division
of Mines and Geology, which will provide assistance in the splitting of core samples
and initial sample preparation procedures, storage of sample splits, and the use of
various field equipment.

Research also will be conducted on the Albany university campus where the data
will be examined and developed by a computer-based trend surface analysis technique
for significant three-dimensional variations. The work will continue for a two-year period

(more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
From: State University of New York at Albany

Dr. George Putnam, page 2

Dr, Putnam, who attended Schenectady public schools, is a graduate of Union
College where he received a Bachelor of Science in chemistry in 1951. He has a
Master of Science in geology from Pennsylvania State University, and a doctorate
in geology and geochemistry from the same institution. He joined the Albany faculty
in 1966 after having held a position as geochemist in the Division of Mines and Geology,
State of California, at San Francisco,
SEIS

August 29, 1969

Home Address: 1225 Sandra Lane, Schenectady
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

John V. Falconeri has been appointed chairman of the department of Romance
languages for the new academic year at State University of New York at Albany. He
replaces Edwin C. Munro who has been acting chairman of the department. Dr. Munro
asked to be re’ieved of his chairmanship for health reasons.

Professor Falconeri has been a member of the department of Romance languages
for the past four years. He is editor of ''Theatre Annual,'' a publication of national
reputation and also is on the editorial board of ''Modern International Drama," a journal
published bi-annually by The Pennsylvania State University Press. His principle
research interests are in Spanish and Italian theatre.

An alumnus of the University of Michigan, Professor Falconeri also completed his
graduate work there. He has a master of arts degree in Romance languages and Doctor
of Philosophy in the same field. His articles have appeared in several professional

"a collection of

journals. He edited ''Los Duendes Deterministas y Otros Cuentos, '

sketches and stories by Enrique Anderson Imbert. He also wrote the introduction,

notes, and exercises for the book, designed for the use of students of Spanish,
FOR

August 29, 1969

Home Address: 3 Tamarack Lane, Elnora

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

Alice T. Hastings, director of libraries, State University of New York at Albany,
will be on sabbatical leave during the fall semester. Her plans include attending the
International Book Fair to be held at Frankfurt, Germany, and, upon her return
from touring several countries abroad, visiting a number of university libraries
throughout the country.

Miss Hastings will make a study of east kinds of statistics are kept by libraries
at other academic institutions in regard to the use of manpower. To learn how these
statistics are used to lead to more scientific management in the library also will be
a part of her project.

The library at the university has received a grant of $61, 365 from the U.S.

Office of Education under the college library resources program by the Higher
Education Act of 1965. It will be used to purchase books and other kinds of library
materials, in support of doctoral programs and for other course work in Afro-American
studies, atmospheric science and weather modification, criminal justice, public affairs,
and social welfare.

Morrison C. Haviland, director of reader services, will be acting director of
libraries in Miss Hastings absence,

SOR IOI
August 29, 1969

Home Address: 42 South Main Avenue, Albany

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Bag
| = h Th STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
ve > H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

IMMEDIATE
Edward Berg, professor of biological sciences at State University of
New York at Albany since 1956, has been named director of health related pro-
fessions at Fresno (Cal.) State College, effective September 8. The announcement
was made by Dr. Horace O. Schorling, dean of the school of professional studies
at Fresno.

Dr. Schorling said, ''The department is particularly fortunate to have obtained
the talents of Dr. Berg. His broad experience in the field of health will bring an
added dimension to the professional studies program."

A graduate of Brooklyn College, Dr. Berg holds a doctorate from Cornell
University. Before joining the Albany faculty in 1956, he taught at Cornell University
Medical College and at Manhattan Medical Assistant's School. He is a member of
several professional organizations, including the Royal Society of Tropical Medic:ine
and Hygiene and the American Society of Parasitologists. ;

The biologists has foreign language proficiency in German, French, and Spanish,
He has published numerous professional and scientific articles. During the past
academic year Dr. Berg participated in the Academic Administration Internship Program
of the American Council on Education at State University of New York at Buffalo.

ee

August 5, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
ES & 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

Vincent J. Schaefer, director, Atmospheric Sciences Research Center, (ASRC),
State University of New York at Albany, has returned from an excursion into the
wilderness of northern Arizona and southern Utah conducting an ecological study.

Some 20 scientists spent several days in ane field under primitive conditions
near Lake Powell and on a Navajo Indian reservation where groundwork was laid
for cooperative plans with the Indians for future ecological study. A complete
report on the expedition is expected within a month.

In addition to Dr, Schaefer, six other SUNYA faculty participated in the field
study. Included were Harold H. Blum, professor of biological sciences; Victor
Rabinowitch, director, Center for Science and the Future of Human Affairs; Alfred
Hulstrunk, assistant director, ASRC; Austin W. Hogan, research associate, ASRC;
Robert Standish, technical assistant, ASRC; and Frank C. Craighead, senior research
associate, ASRC, and ecologist at the university's Jackson Hole Field Station, Moose,
Wyo.

SRK ISIE

August 5, 1969

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

U) i\ N Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

OFFICE OF Ea UNIE? RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901 * 02 = 03

IMMEDIATE

Wallace W. Taylor, professor of education at State University of New York at
Albany, will serve as vice-chairman of the Fourth International Seminar on Special
Education. The seminar will be held in Cork, Ireland, from September 8 - 13, He
plans to attend concurrent meetings of the World Commission on Special Education,

Dr. Taylor has been a member of the commission since 1957, and is presently a
vice-chairman.

From September 13-20, Dr. Taylor will serve as chairman of a seminar at the
World Congress on Rehabilitation to be held in Dublin, Ireland. He will deal with
special education in developing countries.

Professor Taylor received his bachelor of arts and science degree in education
at Kansas State Teachers College and his master's and doctoral degrees frorn State
University of Iowa.

Prior to accepting his present position at SUNYA, Dr. Taylor taught education
and was head of social studies in The Milne School, SUNYA. Among his supplementary
work experiences, Dr. Taylor includes: visiting lecturer at Colorado State College of
Education; educational consultant for the American-Korean Foundation; visiting professo3
at the University of Bergen, Norway; and faculty co-director, International Institute on
the United Nations, Amsterdam, Netherlands.

sso tok

August 5, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
iE} a A a e
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
ay H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

Dean O, William Perlmutter of State University of New York at Albany will direct a
seminar for the Danforth Foundation at the University of Chicago beginning August 26.

The seminar is part of the program of the National Conference for Danforth Associates,
sponsored by the Danforth Foundation,

Some 500 faculty members and their wives from throughout the country will attend the
six-day conference, which has as its theme, ''The Future University: Can It Realize Its
Integrity?'' Seminars are organized around three main topics: the power structure of the
university, the teaching-learning process, and the university and its environment. Dean
Perlmutter will participate in the component dealing with the teaching-learning process
and will lead the seminar on the social sciences,

Seven other seminars are included on the program: Natural Sciences, Professor Joseph
J. Schwab, University of Chicago; Philosophy and History of Ideas, Professor Anthony A.
Nemetz, University of Georgia; General Education, Dean Frederick J. Crosson, University
of Notre Dame; Fine Arts, Dr. Joshua C. Taylor, University of Chicago; Poetry and Creative
Writing, Professor Catherine Firman, LaVerne College; Literary Criticism, Dr. Jerome
Taylor, University of Chicago; and Religion and Human Values, Dr. Thomas A. Langford,
Duke University.

The Danforth Foundation, ranking with Ford and Rockefeller, is one of the leading
private foundations supporting higher education. It has been particularly influential in
exploring the contribution that might be made by religious values.

seokskekeskok

August 5, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY

SU NAS H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampm: ‘ort ion Directo:
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS enous Guaicie ae

IMMEDIATE
More than 2, 400 students will attend the 1969 Summer Planning Conference at State
University of New York at Aloany. The conference, initiated in 1964, will involve seven

three-day sessions for freshmen and four two-day orientation periods for transfer students
during the weeks of July 1 - August 16,

Dr. Sorrell E, Chesin, associate dean of students, said that the conference is being
expanded this year to include a full orientation program for an estimated 1, 800 freshmen
and 600 transfer students, Edward Bazinet, residence hall director, is serving as
coordinator for the conference,

The program involves faculty, mae istration and students. Staff members are
responsible for a variety of activities including academic advisement, counseling and
disc ssion sessions, registration, and other official functions, Much of the program is
administered and conducted by university students who are selected as conference
assistants.

Approximately 250 freshmen will attend each of the seven conference sessions and
125 transfer students will attend each of four transfer sessions, The piograea includes
opportunity for a variety of informal’ social and recreational activities,

There is a special program for parents and guests of students, which includes an
opportunity to meet with principal university officials, Dr. Clifton C. Thorne, vice
president for student affairs, and Dr. Robert Morris, dean of the University College:
officially welcome parents at the opening convocation, Campus tours also are provided.

(Editors: Enclosed are lists of freshmen, transfer students, and
conference assistants from your area, )

SOIR
August 5, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
State University of New York at Albany
Transfer Summer Planning Conference
July 28 - 29, 1969

Ralph Behr 34 Brokaw Lane Great Neck
Lynne Beiermeister 1803 Ninth Street Rensselaer
Craig Benson 29 Van Buren Avenue Ravena
Anne Connolly 23 Pacific Avenue Nannot
Thomas Crennan. 17 Dexter Street Whitesboro

Roger Dick 6 Chatfield Place Painted Post
Thomas Dinardi 203 Fairview Avenue Hudson
Constance Ernst 870 West 181 Street New York
Sandor Fein 899 East Eighth Street Brooklyn
Stephen Fondino Route 4 Box 41 Saugerties
Peter Garlock 57 John Street Dion

Douglas Gootz
Ellen Grant
Stephen Herbert
William Herbert
Barbara Howes

Traute Hustedt

1524 Van Hoesen Road
39 Farmer Street

222 Washburn Road
222 Washburn Road
Valentine Road

241 Oak Street

Castleton-on-Hudson
Canton

Briarcliff Manor
Briarcliff Manor
Shoreham

Bellmore

Alan Kaufman 447 Linda Drive East Meadow
Randolph Kathmann Treadwell Treadwell
June Kenfield William Hollow Road Ischua
Carol Kopack Church Street Port Leydon
Donald Leathersich 30 Howard Avenue Churchville
William Leicht 242 Ontario Street Albany
Miles Levine 40 Richefield Street Tlion
Nancy Liptak
Debra Lobel
Maureen Maloney
Nancy Masterson
Robert McCormick
Margaret Miggins
Dale Oehm

Emily Porzia
Elise Riley

Mark Robarge
Wesley Romansky
Lawrence Rosenbaum
Sharon Rybicky
Richard Salomon
Stephen Sheehan
Sharon Schneider
Michael Smith
Walter Stubbs
Vincent Zabinski

Gail Zampier

Oy ss

158 Dwight Avenue

. 878 Center Drive

1233 West Second Street
Colby Road

128 Hornell Street
Drewville Heights

R.D. #3

2283 Second Street

21 West Sanders Street
M.D, #1

92 Park Avenue

48 Valiant Drive

1236 Fish Creek Road
R.F.D. 7 Fairway Drive
141 East Street

850 Oxford Court

253 - 01 Gist Avenue
1066 Merillon Avenue
256 Quail Street

Darrow School

Corning
Franklin Square
Elmira
Whitefield, N.H.
Nornell
Brewster
Brewster

East Meadows
Greenlawn
Washingtonville
Bay Shore
Henrietta

West Leydon
Kingston

Fort Edward
Valley Stream
Little Neck
Westbury
Albany

New Lebanon
¥ ie STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
i W H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

Hans H, Toch, professor of criminal justice at the School of Criminal Justice,
State University of New York at Albany, will direct a program for the training of police
officers for non-violence-prone conduct to be set up in Oakland, Calif., under a
$84, 134 grant received by Dr. Toch from the National Institute of Mental Health,

U.S. Public Health Service.

The retraining unit for violence-prone officers will take the form of a research
group concerned with police-civilian violence. Preclassified violence-prone officers
will be assigned to the unit as staff members. At first, the officers will engage in
secondary analysis of recorded incidents culminating in violence, They then will shift
to case study materials and to self-analysis designed to point up the role of officers in
producing violence-prone interactions. The officers will explore their own contributions
to violence through various techniques of simulation. The next stage of training will
consist of a problem-solving effort to originate and rehearse non-violence-prone inter-
personal responses. Monitoring and evaluation procedures will allow feedback and
permit a systematic description of training results.

Evaluation of training will include the comparison of performance of trainees
and a matched control group of non-trained violence-prone officers. The graduates
of the program for whom training has proved effective will become workshop leaders
in a formal effort to extend violence-reducting training to the rank and file of a police
department, The workshops will be designed by the trainees and will use techniques
similar to those employed in the intensive phase.

Engaged on the training project, headed by Professor Toch, will be Raymond
Galvin, visiting associate professor at the School of Criminal Justice whose field
is police science and administration; John Guidici, captain of the Oakland Police

1400 WASHINGTON sme REdany, NEW YORK 12203
Training Project; Toch

Page 2

Department, who has a degree in public administration; and J. Douglas Grant,
president of New Careers Development Organization who has a graduate degree in
psychology.

Dr. Toch, an alumnus of Brooklyn College, received his doctoral degree in
psychology from Princeton University. He is interested particularly in psychological
issues in criminal justice. He is the author of the books, ''The Social Psychology of
Social Movements, "' and ''Violent Men,"' his most recent published work. Professor

Toch also edited and contributed to the book, ‘Legal and Criminal Psychology."

sekeiooek

August 7, 1969
STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President

§ U NAA Nathalie Lampman, Information Director

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

Jagadish Garg, professor of physics at State University of New York at Albany,
has received $12, 300 as a renewal of his grant from the National Science Foundation to
support his research on the ''Analysis and Interpretation of High Resolution Total Neutron
Cross Section Measurements" for another year. The total amount of the grant for a period
of three years has been $34, 000.

The research is being done in collaboration with the faculty at Columbia University
where the experimental work was done using their 380 Mev Synchrocyclotron. The inves-
tigations are considered important from the point of understanding the structure of nuclei
and, in some cases, providing crucial information needed in the design of atomic reactors

In addition to the investigations, Dr. Garg also is doing research work on the radi-
ative capture of neutrons in collaboration with scientists at the Brookhaven National Lab-
oratory, making use of their high flux beam reactor. Recently the first doctoral thesis
of the physics department by a graduate student, Karim Rimawi, was completed making
use of the research facility.

Dr. Garg also is engaged in the future planning of the research program in nuclear
structure physics at the SUNYA campus as the director of the nuclear accelerator lab-
oratory to be installed next year.

Professor Garg was born in India and received his Doctor of Science degree at Paris
University, France. Later he spent three years at Manchester University, England, and
five years at Columbia University in New York. He joined the Albany university faculty in
1966. He is a Fellow of the American Fiycical Society and a Fellow of the Institute of
Physics (U.K.). Last year he presented a paper on his research at an International Confe1
ence at Tokoyo, Japan, and one paper at the International Conference on Neutron Cross

Section at Washington. This year on August 25 he will be presenting a paper at the
International Conference on Properties of Nuclear States to be held in Montreal.

aOR
August 7, 1969

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

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

Joseph P. Mascarenhas, associate professor of biological sciences, State
University of New York at Albany, has received a grant of $18, 000 from National
Science Foundation (NSF) through the Research Foundation of State University of New
York, His work will deal with "Synthesis of Wall Material During Pollen Tube
Development."

Dr. Mascarenhas' long term research interests are in the molecular control of
development of higher organisms, He selected pollen for his present research because
pollen offers many advantages in a study of the molecular basis of development not
found in most other plant or animal systems.

Bachelor and master of science degrees were awarded Dr, Mascarenhas by the
University of Poona, India. He received his Ph.D. from the University of California at
Berkeley. The biologist taught at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Wellesley
College, Amherst College, and Berkeley, before coming to Albany in 1968, He also
worked several years as research officer for Parry and Company, Pamba River
Sugar Factory, Tiruvalla, India.

Dr. Mascarenhas has published a number of articles in scientific journals and
has been the recipient of previous grants from Brown-Hazen Fund of Research Corp-
oration and from NSF,

Te A

August 7, 1969

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
= j ae
is s a ¥ ; STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
a = Pt 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 National Science Foundation has granted $42, 000 to the Research Foundation
of State University of New York for a project directed by Frederick G, Walz, Jr.,
assistant professor of biological sciences, State University of New York at Albany.
The award will be used to research ''Relaxation Spectra of Myosin A,"

The investigation consists of temperature-jump kinetic studies and related
equilibrium binding experiments on myosin A. The studies are an attempt to elucidate
the mechanism of the adenosine triphosphatase activity of myosin A and the nature of
different myosin A-Ligand interactions.

Dr. Walz came to the university in 1968 after doing postdoctoral research at
Cornell University. He is a graduate of Manhattan College and hold a doctoral

degree from State University of New York Downstate Medical Center.

aah

August 7, 1969

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

Eugene Mirabelli, Jr., associate professor of English at State University of
New York at Albany, has received a grant from The Rockefeller Foundation to provide
him with an uninterrupted period of writing. The $5, 000 award, to be given to him
through the State University Foundation, Inc., will be used toward Professor Mirabelli's
living and professional expenses.

The writer's latest work, now in progress, was begun under a faculty fellowship
from the Research Foundation of State University of New York last year. Dr, Mira-
belli is the author of two novels, ''The Way In," published by Viking Press, New York,
in 1968, and by Chatto and Windus, London publishers, in 1969, and "The Burning Air,"
published by Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, ten years ago, and by Hutchinson Litd.,
London, the following year.

At the university the author has taught courses in creative writing, freshmen
composition, English literature, English and American poetry, the American novel
between two world wars, and a graduate course on Fitzgerald, Hemingway and Faulkner.

Last year, in a New York Times book review, Martin Levin wrote; ''His style is
epigrammatic and fragmentary -- but the picture he creates is surprisingly complete."
He described the work as a ''virtuoso performance" and added, ''Juxtaposed with a fine
sense of esthetic order are images out of his hero's past, a casual view of postgraduate
Cambridge, and a glimmering of a man's future."

In The Saturday Review, Granville Hicks described Professor Mirabelli's second
novel as good". Earlier he had written that the author's first work showed a sensitivity

(more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
From; State University of New York at Albany

Professor Eugene Mirabelli

and discipline and a feeling for language. Wrote Mr. Hicks, ''As in 'The Burning Air',
Mirabelli's style is so gentle, so free from any straining for effect, apparently so
guileless, that the reader suddenly discovers with astonishment that this is a work
Clrart.

Professor Mirabelli joined the Albany faculty four years ago. He is an alumnus
of Harvard College and received a Master of Arts in writing from John Hopkins
University. In 1964 he received his Doctor of Philosophy from Harvard University.
His dissertation was entitled ''The Apprenticeship of William Faulkner: The Early
Short Stories and the First Three Novels".

Pe ae
August 27, 1969

Home Address: 60 Adams Place, Delmar
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

Arnolds Grava, professor of Romance languages at State University of New York at
Albany, is the author of a new book, ''A Structural Inquiry into the Symbolic Representation
of Ideas,’ just published by Mouton, with offices in The Hague and Paris. The main pur-
pose of the volume is to inquire into the realm of the symbolic representation of man's
knowledge which consists of ideas or concepts.

Professor Grava, whose special fields are French, philosophy, and general linguistics
joined the Albany university faculty in 1954. He holds degrees from the University of Lille,
France; the University of Riga, Latvia; and from the University of Nebraska where he
received his doctorate. He has been the recipient of a Ford Foundation scholarship, a
State University of New York Research fellowship, and a Danforth Foundation grant, His
writings have been published in several professional journals.

Dr. Grava's latest work covers the functional and structural aspects of concepts as
vehicles of the symbolic representation arising from the creative energy or activity of the
human mind, He has indicated that both the purpose and the scope of the book were
prompted and determined by recent developments of modern science, particularly in
cybernetics, which, according to Professor Grava, have made it imperative to view all
problems concerning matter or energy in their correlation with philosophy. The central
idea of the volume, expressed by a simple analogy between the structure of an atom and
that of a symbol-concept, is further based upon the ever increasing scientific evidence
which makes the clear-cut decision between mind and matter obsolete.

At the university Professor Grava teaches general linguistics for all language majors,

advanced language in French, and graduate seminars on Diderot and Baudelair. He is the

(more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
From: State University of New York at Albany

Professor Arnolds Grava, Page 2

co-author of ''Diderot Studies," published in Switzerland in 1963. Additionally,
Professor Grava has been in charge of the French language examination for the
master of arts degree and for a doctor of philosophy candidates from other departments.

Currently he is supervising three doctoral candidates in French.

DEA AKA AKOK

August 27, 1969

Home Address: 270 Washington Avenue, Albany
| .

lees

}

bee 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

Arthur A. Hitchcock, who has been serving as director of the Two-Year
College Development Center of State University of New York at Albany, will
assume the chairmanship of the Department of Guidance and Personnel Services
in the School of Education in September. He succeeds J. Maxson Reeves who has

asked to be relieved of the position in order to return to teaching. Dr. Reeves

served as department chairman for five years.
} Dr. Hitchcock joined the Albany faculty three years ago after serving for
| ten years as executive director of the American Personnel and Guidance Association.
Long recognized as a leader in his field, he previously held several positions in
public and higher education, including posts at the University of Nebraska, Harvard
Graduate School of Education, and New England public schools.

Professor Hitchcock, an alumnus of Wesleyan University, holds graduate
| degrees from Harvard, and from Yale University where he received his doctoral
degree, He is a member of several guidance and personnel organizations and, in

1965-66, he served on former Vice President Hubert Humphrey's Task Force on

| Dropouts.

|

FREI

August 27, 1969

Home Address: 393 Highland Drive, Schenectady

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

One of the world's leading plant physiologists, Noburo Kamiya, a professor
at Osaka University, Japan, will be at State University of New York at Albany
during the coming year. Dr. Kamiya, as visiting professor of biology, will lecture
to undergraduate and graduate students at the university as well as at other State
University of New York institutions.

While at State University at Albany during the 1969-70 year, Dr. Kamiya also
will participate in research in cell physiology, take part in seminars, and give
laboratory instruction. His work on the analysis of cytoplasmic streaming using
Nitella cells and slime molds now is included in many textbooks of physiology as
the outstanding work for analysis of streaming mechanisms in plant cells.

The distinguished biologist was nominated by the Albany University for a
National Science Foundation Senior Foreign Scientists Fellowship in its department
of biological sciences. His salary will be paid through The Research Foundation of
State University of New York, partial support for which is provided by the NSF award
for $14,190. His appointment is for the academic year October 1, 1969, through
July 31, 1970.

SRO

August 27, 1969

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

University of the Air fall semester courses, which include American history,
basic astronomy and beginning German, will be broadcast Saturday and Sunday
afternoons and weekday evenings on eight television stations throughout New York
State. Credit students may register through any one of 15 participating State
University units. They are State University of New York at Albany; State University
Colleges at Brockport, Buffalo, Fredonia, Plattsburgh, and Oswego; Corning,
Dutchess, Hudson Valley, Nassau, Onondaga, Rockland, and Westchester Community
Colleges; State University of New York Maritime College; and Agricultural and Tech-
nical College at Alfred. Participating stations are WNDT Channel 13, New York City;
WMHT Channel 17, Schenectady; WCNY-TV Channel 24, Syracuse; WXXI Channel 21,
Rochester; WNED-TV Channel 17, Buffalo; WPTZ Channel 5, Plattsburgh; WNYC-TV
Channel 31, New York City; and WLIW Channel 21, Garden City, L. I.

State University at Albany offers three hours of academic credit for successfully
completing Rise of the American Nation (history) and Eye on the Universe (astronomy).
The former will be telecast by WMHT Saturdays 1:30 - 2:30 p.m. and 3-4 p.m, and
the latter on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays, 6:30 - 7 p,m.

A University of the Air catalog providing full details on broadcast schedules,
course offerings, participating campuses, tuition and enrollment procedures is avail-
able from Univair, P.O, Box 4440, Grand Central Station, New York, New York.

Seo

August 27, 1969

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

Alice T. Hastings, director of libraries, State University of New York at Albany,
will be on sabbatical leave during the fallsemester. Her plans include attending the
International Book Fair to be held at Frankfurt, Germany, and, upon her return
from touring ceveral countries abroad, visiting a number of university libraries
throughout the country.

Miss Hastings will make a study of what kinds of statistics are kept by libraries
at other academic institutions in regard to the use of manpower. To learn how these
statistics are used to lead to more scientific management in the library also will be
a part of her project.

The library at the university has received a grant of $61,365 from the U.S.

Office of Education under the college library resources program by the Higher
Education Act of 1965, It will be used to purchase books and other kinds of library
materials, in support of doctoral programs and for other course work in Afro-American
studies, atmospheric science and weather modification, criminal justice, public affairs,
and social welfare.

Morrison C, Haviland, director of reader services, will be acting director of
libraries in Miss Hastings absence,

SHOR IK
August 29, 1969

Home Address: 42 South Main Avenue, Albany

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

John V. Falconeri has been appointed chairman of the department of Romance
languages for the new academic year at State University of New York at Albany. He
replaces Edwin C. Munro who has been acting chairman of the department. Dr. Munro
asked to be re*ieved of his chairmanship for health reasons,

Professor Falconeri has been a member of the department of Romance languages
for the past four years. He is editor of ''Theatre Annual," a publication of national

reputation and also is on the editorial board of ''Modern International Drama,"

a journal
published bi-annually by The Pennsylvania State University Press. His principle
research interests are in Spanish and Italian theatre.

An alumnus of the University of Michigan, Professor Falconeri also completed his
graduate work there. He has a master of arts degree in Romance languages and Doctor
of Philosophy in the same field. His articles have appeared in several professional

"a collection of

journals, He edited ''Los Duendes Deterministas y Otros Cuentos, '

sketches and stories by Enrique Anderson Imbert. He also wrote the introduction,

notes, and exercises for the book, designed for the use of students of Spanish.
HOR OH IOK

August 29, 1969

Home Address; 3 Tamarack Lane, Elnora

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
S UV) NV, STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK AT ALBANY
H. David Van Dyck, Assistant to the President
Nathalie Lampman, Information Direct.
OFFICE OF COMMUNITY RELATIONS Area Code 518 457-4901» 02 » 03

IMMEDIATE

Jai Soo Kim, professor of atmospheric science and physics, State University
of New York at Albany, has been named chairman of the department of atmospheric
sciences. He joined the faculty in 1967 after having taught for several years at the
University of Idaho.

Professor Kim last year was the recipient of a $71, 000 grant from the National
Science Foundation for research entitled, ''A Study of Aurora and Related Phenomena,"
His current research will extend over a two-year period during which he will observe
the aurora with two light sensing devices,called photometers, one at Whiteface Mountain,
and the other at Green Bank, West Virginia.

The new department chairman studied at Preparatory College, Keijo Imperial
University, Korea, before attending the Seoul National University where he received
his Bachelor of Science in physics in 1949. He continued his studies later at the Uni-
versity of Saskatchewan in Canada. He holds a Master of Science’ in physics and
doctoral degree, also in physics, from the University of Saskatchewan. He has
lectured at academic institutions in Korea, served as a research assistant in the
physics department at the University of Saskatchewan, and taught at Clarkson College,
Potsdam. He was on the faculty of the University of Idaho for eight years. Many of

his articles have been published in professional journals.

August 29, 1969

Home Address: 3068 Lydius Street, Schenectady

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

Rossell Hope Robbins, internationally known as an authority on Medieval
English verse, has been appointed to the English department of the College of
Arts and Sciences at State University of New York at Albany. He formerly was
research professor at the University of California at Riverside, California.

Professor Robbins, who has a doctorate from Cambridge University in
England, is the author of many published works in his field. Considered out-
standing among his books and numerous articles are ''Historical Poems of the
XIV and XV Centuries''(1959), "Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology"

(1959), "Early English Christmas Carols' (1961), "The Hundred Tales: Les
Cent Nouvelles Nouvelles" (1962), and ''Supplement to the Index of Middle Eng-
lish Verse" (1965), of which he is co-author,

Professor Robbins has taught or has held administrative positions at Cambridge
University, University of California, Duke University, University of North Carolina,
Mount Allison University at New Brunswick, and Sir George Williams University
at Montreal. He also has been guest lecturer at Northwestern University, State
University of New York Upstate Medical Center at Syracuse, and at the universities
of Berlin, London, and Salzburg.

Heok sera

August 29, 1969

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

George W. Putnam, associate professor of geology, State University of New York
at Albany, is the recipient of a $36, 400 grant from the National Science Foundation to
support his work in petrology and geochemistry of igneous and metamorphic rocks,
particularly with respect to metal distribution and the genesis of mineralization and ores.

Professor Putnam is studying the metal distribution, alteration, and petrogenesis
of the Superior stock located in Plumas County, California. Stock is a body of igneous
rock, which intruded upward into older Serres in ground plans is roughly
circular or elliptical in cross section may increase downward. In the Superior stock,
samples from a large number of well distributed drill cores may be obtained for research
purposes. The project, for which the scientist isthe principal investigator, is being under
taken to develop from a number of rock properties potentially available from the core,
supplemented by minor surface sampling, information to provide a three-dimensional
petrogenetic model for the stock. It will involve a relatively large number of analyses by
atomic absorption for metals such as copper, lead zinc, and silver, and x-ray spectro-
graphic analysis of bulk rock samples, and x-ray diffraction of analysis of rock alteration
effects. The research will be conducted with the cooperation of the California Division
of Mines and Geology, which will provide assistance in the splitting of core samples
and initial sample preparation procedures, storage of sample splits, and the use of
various field equipment.

Research also will be conducted on the Albany university campus where the data
will be examined and developed by a computer-based trend surface analysis technique
for significant three-dimensional variations. The work will continue for a two-year perioc

(more)

1400 WASHINGTON AVE., ALBANY, NEW YORK 12203
Brom: Staie University of New York at Albany
Dr, George Putnam, page 2
Dr, Putnam, who attended Schenectady public schools, is a graduate of Union
College where he received a Bachelor of Science in chemistry in 1951, He has a
Master of Science ‘in geology from Pennsylvania State University, and a doctorate
in geology and geochemistry from the same institution. He joined the Albany faculty

in 1966 after having held a position as geochemist in the Division of Mines and Geology,

State of California, at San Francisco.

STEMS TEC

August 29, 1969

Home Address: 1225 Sandra Lane, Schenectady

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Box 2, Folder 23
Resource Type:
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Date Uploaded:
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