Reporter Volume 25, No.22 March 24, 1994 Saturday 26 ECMEA Festival Erie County Music EducatorUs Association Festival. Baird Recital Hall and Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 2 p.m. Monday 28 School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences Seminar A Novel Tissue-Specific Immunoregulatory ProteinQLDIF, S. Jayanth Samuel, graduate student, UB Dept. of Microbiology. 106 Cary. North Campus. Noon. Tuesday 29 Pediatric Conference Laser Therapy for Vascular Lesions, Dale Wilson, M.D. Cafetorium A, Mercy Hospital. 8:30 a.m. Biochemistry Seminar Erythrocyte Metabolism in Mammals, Dr. Nihal Agar, Dept. of Physiology, Univ. of New England. 134B Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m. Wednesday 30 Roswell Park Staff Seminar Hematopoeitic Disorders Involving Signal Transduction, Dr. James Griffin, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Mass. Hilleboe Auditorium, RPCI. 12:30 p.m. Thursday 31 Neuroscience Seminar Molecular Basis of Neuronal Excitability in Drosophila, Diane K. OUDowd, Ph.D., Developmental and Cell Biology, Univ. of California, Irvine. 307 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. Opus: Classics Recital Lynne Garrett, piano. Allen Recital Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Free to the public. Friday 1 Folk Dancing International Folk Dancing. 2 Diefendorf. South Campus. 8-11 p.m. Every Friday; No partner necessary. All are welcome. Monday 4 Research Skills Workshop Researching Information for a Critical Literature Review. B21 Health Sciences Library. South Campus. 10 a.m. No registration required. Research Skills Workshop Introduction to Health Sciences Library Services and Resources. B21 Health Sciences Library. South Campus. 2 p.m. No registration required. Distinguished Scientist Series IRS-1 in the Divergent and Convergent Pathways of Insulin Action, Dr. C. Ronald Kahn, Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Univ. Butler Auditorium. South Campus. 4 p.m. Physiology Seminar Statistical Modeling of Long-Term Cumulative Effects, Donald B. White, Ph.D., Dept. of Mathematics, Univ. of Toledo. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop Beginning Genealogy, Betty Keehn. North Campus. 7-8:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 to register. UUAB Film Japanese Film Festival. Student Union Theater. North Campus. Tickets: $4, UB students; $6, all others. Co-sponsored by SARPA. Life Workshop Writing and Performing Stand-Up Comedy, Bob Fiorella. North Campus. 7-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 to register. Life Workshop Improvisational Comedy, Bob Fiorella. North Campus. 9-11 p.m. Call 645-6125 to register. Tuesday 5 Student Recital Piano Students of the Music Department. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. Noon. Hourani Lecture Series in Philosophy Contemporary Ethical and Political Crisis in Russia: The Ways of Overcoming, Prof. Alexander Razin, Deputy Head of the Ethics Dept. of Moscow State Univ. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 1 p.m. Research Skills Workshop Formulating Medline Search Strategies on HUBNET. B21 Health Sciences Library. South Campus. 3 p.m. No registration required. UUAB Coffeehouse. Algonquin Table. Student Union. North Campus. 8-11 p.m. Wednesday 6 Pharmacy Seminar Late Thrombolytic Therapy in A.M.I., Alan Chaput, Pharm.D. candidate. 248 Cooke. North Campus. 8-9 a.m. Piano Pedagogy Festival Creative Musicianship through Group Piano Instruction, Joseph Rezits. 211 Baird. North Campus. 10-11:30 a.m. Research Skills Workshop Introduction to HUBNETQHospitals and UB Library Resource Network. B21 Health Sciences Library. South Campus. 10 a.m. No registration required. Life Workshop Couples Communication. North Campus. Noon-1 p.m. Call 645-6125 to register. Wednesdays at 4 Plus Literary Series Art in Post-Communist Countries, Dubrvka Djuric, UB Poetics Program Fellow. 438 Clemens. North Campus. Noon. Roswell Park Staff Seminar Electron Microscopy Macromolecules and Three Dimension: Signal Transduction, Dr. F. P. Ottensmeyer, Dept. of Medical Biophysics, Univ. of Toronto. Hilleboe Auditorium, RPCI. 12:30 p.m. Chemical Engineering/Linde Seminar Series Measurement of Colloidal Forces, Dennis C. Prieve, Carnegie Mellon Univ. 206 Furnas. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Biochemical Pharmacology Seminar Hormonal Orchestration of Behavior, Edward A. Kravitz, Ph.D., Dept. of Neurobiology, Harvard Medical School. 307 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop Good Eating: An Introduction to Vegetarianism, Nan and Walter Simpson. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 to register. UUAB Film Lensman. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. Admission: $2, students; $3.50, all others. Opus: Classics Recital Adrienne Tworek-Gryta, soprano; Matthew Tworek, violin; and Joanne Schlegel, piano. Allen Recital Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Free to the public. Visiting Artist Speaker Series Ann Lovett, associate professor of photography, SUNY College at New Paltz. B49 Fine Arts. North Campus. 7:30 p.m. Concert Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson Trio. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Tickets are $8, $6 and $4. For information call 645-2921. UUAB Film Fist of the North Star. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. Admission: $2, students; $3.50, all others. Thursday 7 Piano Pedagogy Festival Sight Reading Problems and Solution: Separating Myth from Reality, Eloise Kornicke. Recital Area, Baird. North Campus. Noon-1:45 p.m. Visiting Artist Speaker Series Francois Deschamps, professor of photography, SUNY College at New Paltz. B49 Fine Arts. North Campus. 1 p.m. Life Workshop Tennis for Beginners, Ron Ingalsbe. North Campus. 3-4 p.m. Call 645-6125 to register. Piano Pedagogy Festival Literature for Piano Duet, Joseph Rezits and Eloise Kornicke. Recital Area, Baird. North Campus. 3:30-5:30 p.m. Visiting Artist Speaker Series Peter Sis, illustrator from Czechoslavakia. 195 Alumni Arena. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Biological Sciences Seminar Experimental Evolution Using Chlamydomonas, Dr. Graham Bell, Biology Dept., McGill Univ. 121 Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m. Buffalo Logic Colloquium Logic and Speech Acts, John Kearns. 120 Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m. Mathematics Colloquium Fell Bundles Over Groupoids, Prof. Alex Kumjian, Univ. of Nevada/Reno. 103 Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m. Pharmaceutics Seminar Hollow Type Suppositories for Enhancement of Rectal Drug Absorption in Man and Rabbits, Yoshiaki Matsumoto, Ph.D., Dept. of Pharmaceutics, Showa College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Tokyo. 508 Cooke. North Campus. 4 p.m. Bristol-Myers Squibb Lecture Series in Pharmacy Societal Resource Allocation: The Ethics of Choice and Choice Policies, James Lindemann Nelson, Ph.D., associate for ethical studies, Hastings Center. 114 Hochstetter. North Campus. 5-6:45 p.m. Thesis Exhibit Opening Don Bernier, M.A.H. candidate. Art Department Gallery. North Campus. 5-7:30 p.m. UUAB Film Fist of the North Star. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. Admission: $2, students; $3.50, all others. UUAB Film Wicked City. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. Admission: $2, students; $3.50, all others. Exhibits Senior Show A Show of art work by seniors majoring in the Art Department, continues through March 25 in the University Gallery, Fine Arts Center, North Campus. Works include painting, photography, sculpture, illustration, communication design and mixed media. Gallery hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. MFA Thesis show A show of works by Joanne Della Penta continues through March 25 in the Art Department Gallery, Fine Arts Center, North Campus. Gallery hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monumental Collage on display RThe Temptations of St. Anthony Altarpiece,S a monumental collage by Buffalo artist Wes Olmsted, is on view through April 30 in the Poetry/Rare Books Collection, 420 Capen Hall, North Campus. The Olmsted altarpiece consists of four 6' x 4' panels thickly collaged with pictures representing what Olmsted considers some of the principle temptations, horrors and blessings of his lifetime. The reading room is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. LUEnfantUs Plans for Washington RLUEnfantUs Plan: Visions of Washington, 1791-1991,S designed by the Charles Sumner School Museum and Archives in Washington, D.C., is on view through March 25 in the James Dyett Exhibition Hall, third floor, Hayes Hall, South Campus. The exhibit, which is free of charge and open to the public, can be seen from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. For further information, call 829-3485, ext. 317. WomenUs History Month Displays Women in Medicine: Early Women UB Graduates 1896-1918.S Health Sciences Library, South Campus. Ideals and Possibilities: Mary Blair-Moody, UBUs First Woman Graduate,S Undergraduate Library, Capen Hall, North Campus. RUB Women in the U90s,S RGovernment Documents Concerning Women,S and RBuffaloUs Reinstein Family.S At Lockwood Library through March 31. Notices Undergraduate commencement speaker sought Attention undergraduates in the following faculties: Arts and Letters, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Social Sciences, and Special and Individualized Majors: The University Commencement Committee wishes to identify a student representative to address the 148th University Commencement Ceremony, Sunday, May 15, in Alumni Arena. Seniors who wish to be considered must submit a written version of their speech by April 6. Further information may be obtained from the Commencement Office, 526 Capen Hall, North Campus. 645-3414. Personal Safety committee The 12 member Personal Safety Committee, consisting of faculty, students and staff, meets on the second Tuesday of every month in Bissell Hall, North Campus, to address campus safety and security issues. Meetings are open, and all members of the university community are encouraged to bring their safety concerns to the committeeUs attention. For information, call 645-2228. Craft Workshops The Creative Craft Center, 120 Fillmore, Ellicott Complex, North Campus, will offer Spring craft workshops beginning the week of Monday, April 4. Workshops are scheduled in cartooning, weaving, knitting and crocheting, quilting, hemstitching, basic photography, Brazilian embroidery, stained glass, jewelry construction, pottery and multi-media for children. Fee for each six-week workshop is $20/$30, students and senior citizens; $30/$50, faculty, staff and others. For further information, a schedule and a map, please phone 645-2434 between 1-5 p.m., or 645-6125 between 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Sponsored by the Division of Student Affairs and the Faculty Student Association. Alcohol Reduction Program The Aware Program of the Research Foundation, 1021 Main St., offers free assistance in cutting down on drinking. The program is designed for moderate to heavy drinkers, ages 21 to 55, who are not alcoholics. The program requires the involvement of a spouse, partner or friend. It includes a free medical examination. Participants will be paid up to $120 for taking part in this eight-week program. All information remains completely confidential. For more information, call 887-2573 anytime. Vendors Sought A limited number of vendor spaces remain for the Mayfest Craft Show, scheduled for May 21-22 from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. in Alumni Arena, North Campus. Proceeds will benefit the Division of AthleticsU Scholarship Fund. Minimum booth size is 6 feet wide by 12 feet deep. Tables, chairs and electric will also be supplied upon request. There is no limit on booth size. To date more than 90 vendors have been accepted for the show, so space is limited. For more information, or to receive a registration form, please call the Division of Athletics at 645-3141. Deadline is April 1. Auditing Fraud Seminar Series The Internal Audit Department is sponsoring a MIS Training Institute seminar, RAuditing Fraud: Prevention, Detection and Control,S June 8-10 on the North Campus. Intended to help internal auditors understand the growing risks and threats of fraud (and how to incorporate prevention, detection and prosecution of fraud into their annual audit plans). Cost is $695. A total of 22 CPEs may be earned through this course. For additional information or an application, contact Gary Walters at 645-2644. Jobs Faculty Assistant Professor-Modern Languages and Literatures, Posting #F-4013. Assistant/Associate/Full Professor (three positions available)-Nursing, Posting #F-4014. Assistant Professor-Orthopaedic Surgery, Posting #F-4015. Assistant Professor-Orthopaedic Surgery, Posting #F-4016. Assistant/Associate/Full Professor-Pediatrics, Posting #F-4017. Assistant Professor (two positions available)-Social Work, Posting #F-4018. Assistant/Associate Professor-Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Posting #F-4019, 4020, 4021. Research Project Staff Associate-Public Service and Urban Affairs, Posting #R-94019. Psychophysiology Specialist-Psychology, Posting #R-94017. Postdoctoral Associate-Oral Biology, Posting #R-92101. Senior Director, Development Systems and Operations (SL-6, Internal Promotional Opportunity)-University Development, Posting #P-4032. Director of Development, School of Nursing (SL-5)-University Development, Posting #P-3099. Administrative Dean Millard Fillmore College and Summer Sessions (MP-3B)-Public Service and Urban Affairs, Posting #P-44031. Research Technician I-Biological Sciences, Posting #R-94023. Research Support Specialist (part-time)-Rehabilitation Medicine, Posting #R-94024. Professional MIS Systems Analyst (SL-4)-Undergraduate Academic Services, Posting #P-4019. Residence Hall Director (SL-2, three positions available)-Residential Life, Posting #P-4026. competitive classified civil service Calculations Clerk I (SG-06)-Student Accounts, Line #31120. Labor Classified Civil Service Cleaner (SG-05)-Custodial Services, Line #34383. Non-Competitive Classified Civil Service Laboratory Mechanician (SG-12)-Geomorphology Laboratory, Line #20452.