Reporter Volume 26, No.20 March 9, 1995 Thursday 9 UB at Sunrise Series The Archaeology of the Buffalo Waterfront, Warren T.D. Barbour. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 7:30-9 a.m. $8, $9. Call 829-2608. Wednesdays at 4 Plus Lecture: Why So Much Talk in Contemporary Novels? Peter Middleton. 438 Clemens. North Campus. 12:30 p.m. Pharmaceutics Seminar The Application of Microdialysis Techniques to Assess the Response of the N-methyl-D-aspartate Receptor Complex, Teresa Lopes. C508 Cooke. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Physics Colloquium Gravity as Curved Spacetime: The Theory of Yilmaz Compared with Einstein's Legacy, Prof. Carroll O. Alley, Univ. of Maryland at College Park. 228 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Art Lecture The End, Victor Burgin. TBA. North Campus. 4 p.m. Call 645-6912. Biological Sciences Seminar Identifying Calcium Transporters in Plants, Dr. Heven Sze, Univ. of Maryland, College Park. 114 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. Mathematics Colloquium Quantized Chaotic Systems and Operator Algebras, Prof. Andrew Lesniewski, Harvard Univ. 103 Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m. Nutrition Seminar Series Control of Cytoskeletal Organization by Phosphorylation: Effects of Alcohol Consumption on Hepatocyte Intermediate Filaments, Dr. Barry S. Eckert. Free continuing education for ADA; co-sponsored by the Graduate Nutrition Club. 306 Parker. South Campus. 4-5 p.m. statistics department colloquium Recently Developed Laplacian Approximations, Dr. John S.J. Hsu, Univ. of Califormia-Santa Barbara. 106 Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m. Nursing Continuing Education Program Certificate Program in Gerontological Nursing. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Sessions run Thursdays through May 11. $15, $50 per session. Call 829-3291 for registration information; registration deadline is five working days before each session. Life Workshop How to Survive Your Landlord, Don Shonn, Esq. North Campus. 5-7 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Ethics in Biomedical Research Colloquium Multicenter Trials, Eligibility Criteria and IRBs, Benjamin Freedman, Ph.D. Univ. of Montreal. Butler Auditorium, Sherman. South Campus. 5:15-7:15 p.m. UUAB Film Series Gas, Food, Lodging. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Scholarship Concert Prism, Charles Peltz, director. Proceeds benefit the UB Music Scholarship Fund. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5. Call 645-2921. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. UUAB Film Series Mi Vida Loca. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Friday 10 Institute for Addiction Studies and Training Art Media Workshop: Exploring the Use of Art Materials in Therapeutic and Educational Settings, Leslie Tabin. Bogel Hall, Hilbert College. $55 fee. Call 645-6140 for information. Women's Health Conference From Contraception Management to Hormone-Replacement Therapy. Program offers 9.5 hours of AMA/PRA Category 1 credit. University Inn and Conference Center. North Campus. $60 nurse practitioners; $120 physicians. Call 845-1834. Pediatric grand rounds Tale of Two Nevi, Jill Crollick, M.D. Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital. 8 a.m. Environmental Engineering and Science Seminar Bioaccumulation of Dioxins, PAHs and PCBs from Sediment by Aquatic Insects, Fish and Waterfowl, Dr. Patrick O'Keefe, Univ. at Albany. 140 Ketter. North Campus. 11 a.m. Musical Performance Organ Students Recital, Students of David Fuller, Roland Martin. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. Noon. Free admission. Call 645-2921. muir string quartet master class Steven Ansell, viola. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 2:30 p.m. computer science lecture On Image Sampling Rate and Recognition Accuracy, Geetha Srikantan, CEDAR. 4 Knox. North Campus. 3-4:15 p.m. Call 645-3180. Physics Seminar Series The BCS-BOSE Paradigm of Superconductivity, Low and High Temperature, Prof. Manuel De Llano, North Dakota State Univ. 222 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. chemistry colloquium New Developments and Applications of Electrospray Ionization Mass Spectrometry in Biological Research, Prof. Ray Bakhtiar, Merck and Company, Inc. 215 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 4 p.m. student conference on campus sexual violence Building A Tradition... Reframing the Anti-Rape Movement, sponsored by The Anti-Rape Task Force. Student Union. North Campus. Registration begins at 4 p.m. $20, $35, $50, $55. Call 645-2353. Athletics Masters Basketball. Alumni Arena. North Campus. 6-11 p.m. Athletics Red Cross Training. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. 6-10 p.m. Slee/Beethoven String Quartet Muir String Quartet. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. $4, $5, $8, $10. Call 645-2921. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Saturday 11 Women's Health Conference From Contraception Management to Hormone-Replacement Therapy. Program offers 9.5 hours of AMA/PRA Category 1 credit. University Inn and Conference Center. North Campus. $60 nurse practitioners; $120 physicians. Call 845-1834. student conference on campus sexual violence Building A Tradition... Reframing the Anti-Rape Movement, sponsored by The Anti-Rape Task Force. Student Union. North Campus. 7 a.m.-9 p.m. $20, $35, $50, $55. Call 645-2353. Athletics Masters Basketball. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. 8 a.m.-10 p.m. Athletics Red Cross Training. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Sunday 12 student conference on campus sexual violence Building A Tradition... Reframing the Anti-Rape Movement, sponsored by The Anti-Rape Task Force. Student Union. North Campus. 7-11:15 a.m. $20, $35, $50, $55. Call 645-2353. Athletics Masters Basketball. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Athletics Red Cross Training. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 3 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Monday 13 Brown Bag Mini Workshop The Budget and Job Security Stress, Counseling Center Staff. 103 Diefendorf. South Campus. Noon-1:30 p.m. Call 645-2003 for reservation. Biochemistry Seminar Site-Specific Regulation by Phosphorylation of the Pyruvate Dehydrogenase Complex, Lioubov Korotchkina. 134B Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m. Physiology Seminar Vaccinia Virus Gene Expresssion, Edward G. Niles, Ph.D. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 4:15 p.m. Tuesday 14 Pediatric Conference The Use of Psychotropic Agents in Children and Adolescents, Davis Kaye, M.D. Mercy Hospital, Main Conference Room. 8:30 a.m. Senior Alumni Luncheon Your Family Tree, Betty Keehn. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. Noon. Call 829-2608. Emeritus Board Meeting Emeritus Center Board. South Lounge, Goodyear Hall. South Campus. 1 p.m. Emeritus Meeting Carole Petro, Associate VP for University Services and co-chair of the Sesquicentennial Committee. South Lounge, Goodyear Hall. South Campus. 2 p.m. Nursing Continuing Education Program Introductory Physical Assessment of the Adult. 6-9 p.m. $250. Call 829-3291 for registration information. qrs arts foundation performance Joshua Bell, violinist. Kleinhans Music Hall. 8 p.m. $12, $16, $20. Call 886-0067. Wednesday 15 Nursing Continuing Education Program PICC Line Insertion, Care and Maintenance. Radisson Hotel and Suites Buffalo, 4243 Genesee St., Cheektowaga. 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m. $150. Call 829-3291 for registration information. Brown Bag Mini Workshop The Budget and Job Security Stress, Counseling Center Staff. 9 Norton. North Campus. Noon-1:30 p.m. Call 645-2003 for reservation. Chemical Engineering Linde Seminar Series Avi Halperin, CNRS, Mulhouse, France. 206 Furnas. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Opus: Classics Live St. Paul's Cathedral Nonet. Allen Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Free admission. Thursday 16 Nursing Continuing Education Program Certificate Program in Gerontological Nursing. Sessions run Thursdays through May 11. 4:30-7:30 p.m. $15, $50 per session. Call 829-3291 for registration information; registration deadline is five working days before each session. Friday 17 Pediatric grand rounds Community Approaches to Injury Prevention, Frederick Rivara, M.D., M.P.H. Kinch Auditorium, Children's Hospital. 8 a.m. Toxicology, Environmental Health Sciences Research Quantitation of Xenobiotic Inducible Genes by RT-PCR, Jim Olson, Ph.D. and Adam Drahushuk. 125 Cary-Farber-Sherman Addition. South Campus. 8:30 a.m. Management Alumni Seminar The Secrets of Power Negotiating, Roger Dawson. Holiday Inn Airport, 4600 Genesee. 9 a.m.-Noon. $75 fee. Call 645-3200. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Saturday 18 Athletics Top 100 Basketball Clinic. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. piano recital Elier Suarez, pianist. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 1:30 p.m. Free admission. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 4 p.m. and 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Sunday 19 Athletics Top 100 Basketball Clinic. Alumni Arena Natatorium. North Campus. Summerfare Theater Nunsense II. Pfeifer Theater. 3 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Monday 20 Institute for Addiction Studies and Training Ethical and Boundary Issues in Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment, William White. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. $60 fee. Call 645-6140. Physiology Seminar The Physiology of the ON Bipolar Cell: One Neuron's View of the Retina, Malcom M. Slaughter, Ph.D. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 4:15 p.m. Philosophy/History Lecture History and the Methodology of the Social Sciences, Prof. Ruthe, Univ. of Aachen, Germany. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 5 p.m. South African Film Screening Shot Down, Andrew Worsdale, director. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 7:30 p.m. Following the screening, James Sey will present a paper titled "Apartheid, Aesthetics, and Media Poser: Three Independent South African Films." Tuesday 21 wnytdc seminar Capitalizing on Opportunities in the Former Soviet Republics. Buffet breakfast included; space is limited, preregistration and prepayment requested. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 8:15-11 a.m. $60. Call 636-3626. Pediatrics Conference Pediatric and Adolescent Gynecology, Carmen Todoro, M.D., F.A.C.O.G. Mercy Hospital Cafetorium A. 8:30 a.m. Brown Bag Reading Series Emigre Queen, by Kazimierz Braun. Center for the Arts Rehearsal Workshop. North Campus. Noon-1 p.m. Free admission. Myhill Lecture Dissipation and Its Delights, Prof. Stuart S. Antman, Univ. of Maryland. 146 Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m. South African Film Screening Mapantsula Oliver Schmitz, director, in English, Zulu, Sotho, Afrikaans w/Eng. subtitles. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 4 p.m. Following the screening there will be a panel discussion with James Sey, James Pappas, and Samba Diop. Wednesdays at 4 Plus McNulty Chair Perspectives on Translation #5 Lecture -- Poetry: A Figure in Rags, Jose Kozer. 930 Clemens. North Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop Exploring Career Change, Janet Mather, Joyce Anderson, Lynn Stachewicz. North Campus. 6-8 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Nursing Continuing Education Program Introductory Physical Assessment of the Adult. 6-9 p.m. $250. Call 829-3291 for registration information. South African Film Screening The Processed Image, compilation of nine films, various directors; compiled by Robert Weinek. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. Following the screening there will be a panel discussion with James Sey. the algonquin table coffeehouse Plaster Sandals. Harriman Hall. South Campus. 8 p.m. Free coffee and music. Call 645-2957. Wednesday 22 COGSCI Colloquium TBA, Cathi Best, Wesleyan Univ. 280 Park. North Campus. Co-sponsored by Spoken Language Training Grant. Pharmacy Seminar The Role of Long Acting Beta Adrenergic Agonists in Management of Asthma, Bardia Akbari. 248 Cooke. North Campus. 8-9 a.m. Nursing Continuing Education Program Review Course for Nursing Continuing Education and Staff Development Certification Examination. 10 a.m.-1 p.m. $150. Call 829-3291 for registration information. Outreach Workshop Overcoming Shyness, Counseling Center. 145E Student Union. North Campus. Noon-1 p.m. Biochemical Pharmacology Seminar In-vitro and In-vivo Studies With Glycine Partial Agonists: A Novel Strategy for Modulating NMDA Receptor Function, Kathleen Boje, Ph.D. 307 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. logic colloquium Eighth Meeting. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m. Myhill Lecture Dissipation and Its Delights, Prof. Stuart S. Antman, Univ. of Maryland. 146 Diefendorf. South Campus. 4 p.m. nursing program Infection-Control Training, offered by the Office of Continuing Nurse Education. 4-7 p.m. $20, $35. Call 829-3291. Wednesdays at 4 Plus Bilingual Poetry Reading, Jose Kozer. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 4 p.m. Architecture Lecture Toronto: Confronting the Regional City, Ken Greenberg. Sponsored by the School of Architecture and Planning. 301 Crosby. South Campus. 5:30 p.m. Free admission. UUAB Film Series Belle Epoque (subtitled). Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Life Workshop Buying a Home, Peter J. Maurer Jr. 7-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Opus: Classics Live Cello and Piano, H lene Gagn and Silvie Beaudette. Allen Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Free admission. archaeological lecture Romans and Natives of the Island of Sardinia, Prof. Steve Dyson. 205 Churchhill Tower, Canisius. 7:30 p.m. Mus.B. degree recital Michelle Kiec, clarinet. Ms. Kiec is a student of Edward Yadzinsky. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. UUAB Film Series Pulp Fiction. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Thursday 23 Management Roundtable Sessions ECMC Financial Turnaround & Current Health-Care Trends, Paul J. Candino, CEO Erie County Medical Center. Fanny's Restaurant, 3500 Sheridan. 8-9 a.m. $40 per session or $120 for all four sessions. Call 645-3200. guitar students recital Students of Joanne Castellani. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. Noon. Life Workshop Introduction to the Worldwide Web and HTML, Brandon Plewe. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Pharmaceutics Seminar TBA, Dr. Scott Diamond. C508 Cooke. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Biological Sciences Seminar Sexual Selection in a Coral Reef Fish, Dr. Robert Warner, Univ. of California, Santa Barbara. 114 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop Dreams and Unhealthy Cultural Values, Pat L. Smith. 4-6 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Philosophy Lecture Prometheus, Kai Nelson. 280 Park. North Campus. 4 p.m. Nursing Continuing Education Program Certificate Program in Gerontological Nursing. 4:30-7:30 p.m. Sessions run Thursdays through May 11. $15, $50 per session. Call 829-3291 for registration information; registration deadline is five working days before each session. Ethics in Biomedical Research Colloquium Deception in Research: The Lumpectomy-Mastectomy Study, Donald Marquis, Ph.D. Univ. of Kansas. Butler Auditorium, Sherman. South Campus. 5:15-7:15 p.m. UUAB Film Series Belle Epoque. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Life Workshop An Introduction to Meditation, Paula Schank. 7-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. faculty recital series Daniel McCabe, baritone. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. $2, $5, $6, $8. UUAB Film Series Pulp Fiction. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. EXHIBITS ARCHITECTURE EXHIBITION "Construction, Intention, Detail: Five Projects from Five Swiss Architects" runs through March 24 in the James Dyett Exhibition Hall on the third floor of Hayes. Architects represented include Herzog & de Meuron, Burkhalter & Sumi, Meili & Peter, Diener & Diener, and Peter Zumthor. Gallery hours are Mondays 9 a.m.-8 p.m., and Tuesdays-Fridays, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. BEETOW SHOW OPENS MARCH 23 Master of Fine Arts candidate Christine Beetow's thesis exhibit opens March 24 at the Center for the Arts with a reception from 7-9:30 p.m. Her illustrations will remain on display in the Art Department Gallery through April 10. Gallery hours are Tuesday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Wednesday-Friday, 10 a.m.-8 p.m., and Saturday 11 a.m.-8 p.m. CONTINUING EXHIBITS March 9 is the final day for "The Senior Show," featuring work by senior BA and BFA candidates in painting, sculpture, computer art, photography, printmaking, illustration, and communication design in the Art Department Gallery. Simon Unger's "Red Vertical" runs through July 31 in the Lightwell Gallery. This site-construction explores the interconnections between art and architecture. Admission is free. Gallery hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and Noon-5 p.m. Sunday. Call 645-6912. DECIDE WHO YOU ARE Adrian Piper's investigation of racism has led her to create an arresting body of confrontational art. Her exhibit, "Decide Who You Are," will be up through April 22 at the Center for the Arts Gallery (first floor). Admission is free; gallery hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and Noon-5 p.m. Sunday. Call 645-6912. THE END DECONSTRUCTS STEREOTYPES Through his exhibit, "The End," Victor Burgin deconstructs social stereotypes, myths, and clich s about gender and power, particularly as perpetuated by the media. His work will be displayed through April 22 in the Center for the Arts Gallery, second floor. Admission is free; gallery hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and Noon-5 p.m. Sunday. Call 645-6912 or 645-6976. Notices COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER The University Commencement Committee seeks a student representative to address graduates at the 149th University Commencement, scheduled for 10 a.m. Sunday, May 14 in Alumni Arena. All graduating seniors in the faculties of Arts and Letters, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, Social Sciences and Special and Individualized Majors are eligible to act as commencement speaker. Nicolas D. Goodman, vice provost for undergraduate education, will chair a selection committee comprised of faculty, staff, and students. Seniors who wish to be considered must submit a written version of their speech to Goodman. Each finalist will present his/her address before the committee, and the winning speech will be presented by the student at commencement. Speeches should be no longer than six minutes. Selection will be based on relevancy, appropriateness of content, and delivery. Entries must be submitted by Wednesday, April 5 to the Student Speaker Selection Committee, c/o Nicolas D. Goodman, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education, 549 Capen Hall, North Campus, 645-2991. CREATIVE CRAFT CENTER The Creative Craft Center, located at 120 Fillmore, Ellicott Complex, North Campus, offers its Spring '95 Craft Workshops starting the week of March 20. Workshops are scheduled in weaving, crocheting and knitting, quilting, Brazilian embroidery, greeting card design, pottery, intermediate pottery, cartooning, basic photography, nature photography, creative photography, color photography, advanced color photography, aerial photography, darkroom techniques, jewelry construction, beginning stained glass, advanced stained glass, pottery and multimedia for children. All workshops run from 7-10 p.m. one night a week for six weeks, except children's classes on Saturday mornings. Fees are $30 for students and $50 for all others; early sign up is advised. For more information, call 645-6125 or 645-2434. INTERNATIONAL FOLK DANCING All are welcome to join the International Folk Dancing group each Friday from 8-11 p.m. in 2 Diefendorf Hall on the South Campus. These free sessions begin with teaching. Partners are not needed. The sponsor is the Graduate Student Association. Jazz History Course to be taught Jazz expert William Coles, UB Prof and Chair of Ophthalmology, will present "Jazz: America's Unique Art Form" 7-10 p.m. Tuesday, March 28 at the Buffalo State College Lifelong Learning Center. The one-evening course explores the evolution of jazz music in America and how jazz artists have built upon their musical heritage to make unique and creative music. Course fee is $15, plus $2 for materials. Preregistration is requested by March 22. For more information, call 878-5906. WBFO 88.7 FM is co-sponsor. PANIC ATTACK SUFFERERS SOUGHT Individuals ages 18 and older who suffer from panic attacks are being sought to participate in non-drug treatment research being conducted at the Center for Anxiety Research in the UB Department of Psychology. Panic attacks are sudden rushes of intense fear or anxiety that occur out of the blue. Symptoms may include racing heart, shortness of breath, sweating and trembling or shaking. Those selected to participate in the research will receive a thorough assessment and free treatment. Individuals undergoing psychotherapy are not eligible. For further information, contact Gayle Beck, Ph.D., at 645-3650, ext. 337. POETRY CONTEST The Undergraduate Library announces the 1995 poetry contests sponsored in cooperation with the Department of English and the Friends of the University Libraries. Two prizes of $100 each are offered for the best poems submitted by UB students. The Academy of American Poets contest is open to both graduate and undergraduate students; the Friends of the University Libraries prize is for undergraduates only. Entries should consist of one to six typewritten pages. The writer's name should not appear on the poems, but on a cover sheet with the name of the prize and the writer's name, class, address and telephone number. Entries should be sent to Margaret R. Wells, Director, Undergraduate Library, 107 Capen Hall, North Campus, Buffalo, N.Y. 14260-2200. The deadline is Friday, March 24. Winners will be notified by April 12 and will be invited to read from their work at a poetry reading to be held at 4 p.m. Thursday, April 20 in the Poetry/Rare Books Room of the Library, 420 Capen Hall. PORTFOLIO REVIEW The UB Art Department will have portfolio reviews for currently enrolled students Saturday, March 25 in the Center for the Arts. If you are planning to change your major to a B.F.A. or a B.A. in Art beginning with the fall 1995 semester, you must present, in person, an acceptable portfolio of art work. Applications and information about portfolio requirements are available in the Art Office, 202 Center for the Arts. Reviews will be by appointment only. Please see the "Portfolio Requirements: Currently Enrolled UB Students" form for details. RETIREES NEEDED UB researchers seek healthy, retired adults ages 60 and older to participate in a brief study to analyze the processes used in thinking. Those selected to participate in the study will undergo one interview and complete a few simple mental tasks. In addition, each participant must have a significant other or relative who can complete a brief questionnaire. Participants will be reimbursed for their time. Those who cannot come to the Erie County Medical Center can be interviewed at home. Those interested in participating in the study should call 884-6118 and leave their name, telephone number and the times they can be reached at home. Zaleski memorial service to be held A memorial service for Marek B. Zaleski, M.D., Ph.D., will be held at Noon on Friday, March 24 in the Lippschutz Room, 125 CFS Addition, South Campus. Jobs RESEARCH Research Support Specialist-Nursing, Posting #R-95015. Secretary II-Social & Preventive Medicine, Posting #R-95016. Patient Care Technician-Social & Preventive Medicine, Posting #R-95017. PROFESSIONAL Computer Network Manager (SL-3)-University Publications, Posting #P-4110. Assistant Dean, Career Development Services (SL-5)-School of Management, Posting #P-5006. LABOR CLASSIFIED CIVIL SERVICE Cleaner (SG-5)-University Facilities, Line #31597. To obtain more information on jobs listed above, contact Personnel Services, 104 Crofts Hall.