Reporter Volume 26, No.23 April 6, 1995 Thursday 6 Cardiopulmonary Center Seminar Angiogenesis, Dr. John Ricotta, Dept. of Surgery. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 8 a.m. Life Workshop Introduction to the World Wide Web and HTML, Brandon Plewe. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Pharmaceutics Seminar The Effect of Anti-methotrexate IgG and Fab Fragments on Methotrexate Disposition in the Rat, Joseph Balthasar. C508 Cooke. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Physics Colloquium Applications of Field Theory to Turbulence Problems, Prof. Steven Orszag, Princeton Univ. 228 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 3:45 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. honoring dinner Buffalo Law Review, honoring Thomas E. Headrick, Hon. Hugh B. Scott, guest speaker. Classics V Banquet and Conference Center, 2425 Niagara Falls Blvd. Cocktails, 6 p.m.; dinner, 7 p.m. $40 per person. Call 645-2107. Life Workshop Estate Planning, Joseph and Lynn Ferrain. 6:30-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. UUAB Film Series Citizen Kane. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Musical Theater Godspell, Zodiaque Dance Company and Gemms Musical Theatre Company. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. Summerfare Theater Rock Musical-TBA. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. UUAB Film Series Star Trek, Generations. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Friday 7 Social Work Continuing Education Program Exploring and Integrating Spirituality in Working with Women in Therapy, Bonnie Collins. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. $60. Call 645-6140 for registration information. Higher Education Seminar Law Lecture, Robert M. O'Neil, Thomas Jefferson Center for the Protection of Free Expression. Moot Hall, Buffalo State College. 8 a.m. $5. Call 645-2471. Pediatric Grand Rounds Inroads in Human Genetics, Michael D. Katz, M.D. Vice President of Research, March of Dimes. Kinch Auditorium. 8 a.m. library program Wendy Lougee, Univ. of Michigan. Special Collections Reading Room, 420 Capen. North Campus. 10 a.m. Evolutionary Biology and Ecology Lecture Peacemaking Among Primates, Prof. Frans B.M. De Waal, Emory Univ. 280 Park Hall. North Campus. 2 p.m. Medical Chemistry Seminar Thiophilic Chromatography of Proteins and Peptides: Is Sulfur in your Future? Dr. Eugene Sulkowski, RPCI. 114 Hochstetter. North Campus. 3 p.m. Computer Science Colloquium A Software Environment for Parallel Computer Vision, Leah H. Jamieson, Purdue Univ. 4 Knox. North Campus. 3-4:15 p.m. Call 645-3180. Mathematics Colloquium Stability of Travelling Waves in Reaction-Diffusion Equations, Prof. Patrick Miller, Brown Univ. 103 Diefendorf. South Campus. 3:30 p.m. physics seminar series Physics of Rapid Granular Flows, Prof. James T. Jenkins, Cornell Univ. 222 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Call 645-2017. Chemistry Colloquium Determination of Sequential Bond Dissociation Energies in Organic and Organometallic Molecules, Prof. Robert R. Squires, Purdue Univ. 215 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 4 p.m. UUAB Film Series Star Trek, Generations. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 and 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Film and Video Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 7 p.m. Free. Kick off to Open House Inside Scoop about Finding Success without Sacrificing a Social Conscience, Fred "Chico" Lager, Former President and CEO of Ben & Jerry's Homemade, Inc. Free ice cream samples at 6:30. Center for the Arts. North Campus. 7:30 p.m. $3. Call 645-6125 or 645-ARTS. Musical Theater Godspell, Zodiaque Dance Company and Gemms Musical Theatre Company. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. Special music Event Adam Holzman, guitar. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Summerfare Theater Rock Musical-TBA. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. UUAB Film Series Heavy Metal. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 11:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Saturday 8 Alumni Event University-Wide Open House for Fall 1995. Call 645-6442. master class Sherrill Milnes, barritone. Slee Hall B1, North Campus. 2 p.m. $20, $50. Call 852-2072. Summerfare Theater Rock Musical-TBA. Pfeifer Theater. 4 and 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Art Lecture Adrian Piper. Piper's video and photographic exhibit, "Cornered/Decide Who You Are," is on display through May 5 in the UB Art Gallery. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 6 p.m. Free. Ensemble Series UB Percussion Ensemble, Jan Williams and Anthony Miranda, directors. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free admission. Call 645-2921. Musical Theater Godspell, Zodiaque Dance Company and Gemms Musical Theatre Company. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. Sunday 9 Summerfare Theater Rock Musical-TBA. Pfeifer Theater. 3 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. Dance Ballet Hispanico. Part of QRS series. Center for the Arts. North Campus. 7 p.m. $10, $15, $20. Call 645-6259. Mus.B. degree recital Katherine Soscia, soprano, student of Sylvia Dimiziani. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Admission is free. Call 645-2921. Musical Theater Godspell, Zodiaque Dance Company and Gemms Musical Theatre Company. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. Monday 10 Institute for Addictions Studies and Training Program Medical Aspects of Drug and Alcohol Abuse for Prevention/Education Professionals, Sheila Banks. WCA Hospital, Jones Memorial Health Ctr., Jamestown. $50 fee. Call 645-6140. internet clinic The Buffalo Free-Net. 223 Lockwood. North Campus. 1 p.m. Call 645-2817. Biochemistry Seminar Structure and Localization of Vacuolar ATPase and Other Regulatory Secretory Membrane Proteins, Gary Dean. 134B Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop First Aid for Pets, Kevin J. Kuhn, D.V.M. 7-9:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Film screening The Mothers of Plaza De Mayo, Lourdes Portillo, Award-winning Chicana film writer, director and producer. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free and open to the public. Visiting Artist Series David Soyer, cello, and Seymour Lipkin, piano. Sonatas by Beethoven, Martinu, Brahms. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. $4, $5, $8, $10. For information, call 645-2921. Tuesday 11 Master Class Seymour Lipkin, piano. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 9 a.m. Free admission. For information, call 645-2921. Film screening The Devil Never Sleeps, Lourdes Portillo, Award-winning Chicana film writer, director and producer. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 10 a.m. Free and open to the public. Cardiopulmonary Center Seminar Special Seminar -- Fetal Response to Hypoxia, Dr. Dino Giussani, Cornell Univ. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 11 a.m. brass students recital Recital, Students of Richard Myers. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. Noon. Free admission. Call 645-2921. Brown Bag Reading Series In Confidence, by Margaret Hollingsworth. Center for the Arts Rehearsal Workshop. North Campus. 12:30-1:30 p.m. Free admission. Emeritus Center Hiroshima and Nagasaki -- the 50th Anniversary of the Atomic Bombing, June Alker. The talk will be preceded by a board meeting at 1 p.m. Emeritus Center, South Lounge, Goodyear Hall. South Campus. 2 p.m. Call 876-9085. Pharmaceutics Seminar Calculating Volumes of Distribution in Nonlinear Systems, Dr. Haiyung Cheng, Merck Research Laboratories. C508 Cooke. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Reception Public reception for Lourdes Portillo, Award-winning Chicana film writer, director and producer. Portillo's visit is sponsored by the UB Department of Modern Languages and Literatures, the Department of Media Study, the Melodia Jones Chair in French (Raymond Federman) and the James McNulty Chair in English (Dennis Tedlock). 830 Clemens. North Campus. 4 p.m. Free and open to the public. Outreach Workshop Exploring Sexual Identity, Counseling Center. 145E Student Union. North Campus. 5:30-7 p.m. Nursing Continuing Education Program Introductory Physical Assessment of the Adult. 6-9 p.m. $250. Call 829-3291 for registration information. Life Workshop An Interviewer's Perspective on the Interview, Marie Bulger. 7-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. coffeehouse Coffeehouse. Harriman Hall. South Campus. 8 p.m. M.M. degree recital Anothony J. Burke, organist, Student of David Fuller. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free admission. Call 645-2921. Wednesday 12 Pharmacy Seminar Clinical Impact of Gene Therapy, Susan Chuck. 248 Cooke. North Campus. 8-9 a.m. WNYTDC Seminar OSHA: What's New and What Does It mean to Your Business. Buffet breakfast included; space is limited, preregistration and prepayment requested. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 8:15-11 a.m. $60. Call 636-3626. Book Sale Friend's Room Book Sale. Lockwood Library Friend's Room. North Campus. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Prices will range from $1 to $3. All sales will be final and only cash will be accepted. Outreach Workshop Building Self-Confidence, Counseling Center. 145E Student Union. North Campus. Noon-1 p.m. Roswell Park Staff Seminar The Gilda Radner Familial Ovarian Registry: 1978-Present, M. Steven Piver, M.D. RPCI. North Campus. 12:30 p.m. Cognitive Science Colloquium Finding Out About Filling In, Prof. Daniel Dennett, Tufts Univ. 280 Park. North Campus. 2 p.m. biophysics lecture Hidden Markov Models for Speech and Signal Recognition, Dr. Richard C. Rose, Murray Hill. 106 Cary. South Campus. 4 p.m. Buffalo Logic Colloquium Unconnected Information Recovery Problems, John Corcoran. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m. Call 881-1640 or 645-2438. Wednesdays at 4 Plus Prose Reading, Lydia Davis. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 4 p.m. Pharmacy Seminar Factors which Determine the Maximum Dose of Cipro-floxacin, Angela Cheng. 248 Cooke. North Campus. 4:30- 5:30 p.m. Alumni Event Student Alumni Annual J. Scott Fleming Merit Awards Ceremony. Jeanette Martin Room. 6-8 p.m. Call 829-2608. UUAB Film Series Unbearable Lightness of Being. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. internet clinic The Buffalo Free-Net. 223 Lockwood. 7 p.m. Call 645-2817. Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival Music: Performance to Protest, Includes video "From Little Things Big Things Grow," "Gandy Dancers," and "Earl Robinson: Ballad of an American." Center for theArts Screening Room. North Campus. 7 p.m. Free admission. Call 645-6902. Opus: Classics Live Piano, Paul Rumrill. Allen Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Free admission. Lecture Where's the Darkness, Where's the Light? Iman W. Deen Mohammed, Muslim American Spokesman for Human Salvation. Center for the Arts. North Campus. 7:30 p.m. Free admission. Call 645-2997, 645-2234, or 645-2097. UB Jazz Combo Jazz Performance, Sam Falzone, conductor. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free admission. Call 645-2921. UUAB Film Series Barcelona. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Thursday 13 Cardiopulmonary Center Seminar Superstition in Nitric Oxide Therapy, Dr. Jun Iwamoto, Asahikawa Medical College, Japan. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 8 a.m. Book Sale Friend's Room Book Sale. Lockwood Library Friend's Room. North Campus. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. Prices will range from $1-$3. All sales will be final and only cash will be accepted. piano students recital Piano, students of Frina Arschanska Boldt. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. Noon. Free admission. Call 645-2921. pharmaceutics seminar Liposomal Therapy of Brain Tumors: Evidence of Intra-Tumoral Liposome Deposition? Dr. Uma Sharma, post-doctoral fellow. C508 Cooke. South Campus. 3:30 p.m. Physics Colloquium The Discovery of the Top Quark at Fermilab, Prof. Ulrich Baur. 228 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Mathematics Colloquium Applications of Set-Valued Mappings to Dynamical Systems, Prof. Tomasz Kaczynski, Univ. de Sherbrooke. 103 Diefendorf. 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 person. Call 829-3291 for registration information; registration deadline is five working days before each session. Cognitive Science Distinguished Speaker Series Dismantling the Cartesian Theater, Prof. Daniel Dennett, Tufts Univ. 255 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 5 p.m. Opening Reception Master of Fine Arts Thesis Exhibit -- Nathaniel Brockmann. The exhibit runs through May 4. Center for the Arts -- Art Department Gallery. North Campus. 5-7 p.m. Call 645-6878. Ethics in Biomedical Research Colloquium Intellectual Property and Conflict of Interest, Kathleen Terry, J.D., Office of Technology Transfer. Butler Auditorium, Sherman. South Campus. 5:15-7:15 p.m. Life Workshop Grants Development Workshop, Maureen McMahon. 5:30-7:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. UUAB Film Series Unbearable Lightness of Being. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. ensemble series UB Symphonic Band, Sarah McKoin, conductor; Louis Vitello, assistant conductor. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Call 645-ARTS. Summerfare Theater Rock Musical-TBA. Pfeifer Theater. 8 p.m. $10, $12, $15. Call 839-8540. UUAB Film Series Barcelona. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. EXHIBITS brockmann show opens April 13 Nathaniel Brockmann's Master of Fine Arts thesis exhibit opens with a reception on April 13, from 5-7 p.m. at the Center for the Arts. His photographs will remain on display through May 4 in the Art Department Gallery. Gallery hours are Tuesdays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Wednesdays-Fridays 10 a.m.-8 p.m., and Saturdays 11 a.m.-8 p.m. student show continues An exhibit of recent student works in conjunction with the national accreditation team's review opened April 3 in the James Dyett Exhibition Hall, third floor, Hayes Hall, South Campus. On Wednesday, Gallery hours are Mondays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Tuesdays through Fridays 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. CONTINUING EXHIBITS Adrian Piper's 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. Likewise, Victor Burgin's "The End" will be showing 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. Simon Unger's "Red Vertical" runs through July 31 in the Lightwell Gallery; admission is free. Gallery hours are 10:30 a.m.-8 p.m. Wednesday-Saturday and Noon-5 p.m. Sunday. Call 645-6912. Notices CALLING ALL ALUMNI ATHLETES The Alumni Association's Athletic Hall of Fame seeks nominations for inductees. Nominators may consult the Division of Athletics and the University Archives to assist them in compiling information about and for candidates. Nomination forms are available at the Office of Alumni Relations, South Campus, and must be completed and received by May 5, 1995. CAMPUS CLUB SETS SAIL FOR SHOWBOAT The Campus Club travels to Toronto to see Showboat on Wednesday, May 31. For a $90 or $100 fee, participants receive a light breakfast, show tickets, charter bus transportation to and from Toronto, and dinner. The bus will leave at 8 a.m. from Tops Plaza, Colvin and Eggert and return at 9 p.m. Reserve your place today with a $50 deposit, payable to: the Campus Club. Balance is due on April 21. Call 645-2816, 645-2592, or 645-2145. DENTAL STUDY PARTICIPANTS SOUGHT UB dental researchers are seeking more than 100 healthy adults, between 18-70, with some signs of gum (periodontal) disease to help evaluate the effect of a mouthrinse, a toothpaste, and a mouth moisturizer on oral health. Participants must have some symptoms, such as red gums and bleeding gums after toothbrushing; they will make four brief visits to the School of Dental Medicine on South Campus. Upon completion of the study, each participant will be reimbursed $100 for time and travel. Call 829-3850 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. FLOWER SALE FOR GRACE CAPEN SCHOLARSHIP The 1995 Women's Club Flower Sale to benefit the Grace Capen Scholarship has begun. Geraniums and impatiens are available for the same price as last year: geraniums, 4-1/2" pots @ $1.80 each or $20 per dozen, impatiens, 6 plants per pack, $1.50 per pack or $10 for 10" hanging pots. Call 839-0469 or 634-4727 to order, pickup orders at the Center for Tomorrow on May 10. Put a little color in your spring -- but order by April 28. FULBRIGHT GRANT COMPETITION OPENS The official opening of competition for 1996-97 Fulbright Grants for graduate study in academic fields and professional training in the creative and performing arts is slated for May 1. Fulbright Grants are available for study or research; travel grants are available to selected countries to supplement maintenance awards from other sources that do not provide funds for international travel or to supplement the applicant's personal funds. The J. William Fulbright Scholarship Board, composed of 12 educational and public leaders appointed by the President of the United States, establishes criteria for the selection of candidates and awards the grants. Applicants must be U.S. citizens at the time of application and hold a bachelor's degree or its equivalent by the beginning date of the grant. Creative and performing artists are not required to have a bachelor's degree, but they must have four years of relevant training or study. Candidates in medicine must have an M.D. or equivalent at the time of application. All applicants must have sufficient proficiency in the language of the host country. Full grants provide round-trip international travel, maintenance for the tenure of the award, a research allowance, and tuition waivers, if applicable. Travel grants provide round-trip international travel to the country where the student will pursue research; all grants include health and accident insurance. Contact Dr. Barbara Bunker, Fulbright Program Advisor, in 362 Park Hall, 645-3650, ext. 362 or ext. 358. Deadline for receipt of applications is September 26, 1995. GENERAL MEETING OF THE PRB SLATED In cooperation with the Office of the Provost, the Chair of the Faculty Senate has arranged for a general meeting for faculty throughout the university with the Chair of the President's Review Board (PRB) Prof. Mirdza Neiders and other members of the PRB that are able to attend on Friday, April 21 at 3 p.m. in Room 330 of the Student Union Assembly Hall. GETTING FUNDED CONFERENCE The Western New York Health Science librarians will sponsor a daylong conference on "Getting Funded: Developing Skills in Proposal Writing" Friday, April 21 in UB's Health Sciences Library. Taught by Alan Rees, professor emeritus, School of Library and Information Science, Case Western Reserve University, the course will outline critical elements in the proposal writing process and show how to prepare persuasive and winning proposals in a highly competitive grants marketplace. Cost is $25 for WNYHSL members and $30 for non-members. An additional charge of $20 applies to those who wish to receive Medical Library Association continuing education credits, which includes six CE credits, a certificate and a course manual. Call Karen Kreizman, WNYHSL president, 887-3637, E-mail: Kreizman@bms.com. Registration deadline is April 14. GRAD SCHOOL EXCELLENCE IN TEACHING AWARDS The Graduate School will host the Graduate Student Excellence in Teaching Awards Ceremony on Friday, April 7, at 3 p.m. in the Center for the Arts Screening Room. The ceremony is open to all members of the university and community. HUMANITIES COMMITTEE SEEKS INPUT The University Humanities Committee asks the UB community's aid in their consideration of the present state of humanities at UB and the formation of plans for the future. Please send ideas, in writing, to: Carol Jacobs, Committee Chair, Diane Christian, or Robert Daly, 306 Clemens (English); James Bono, 559 Park (History); Stephen Dyson, 712 Clemens, John Peradotto, 733 Clemens (Classics); Rudolphe Gasche, 638 Clemens (Comparative Literature); Jorge Gracia, 681 Baldy (Philosophy); David Perry 201G Hayes (Planning and Design); John Quinan, 606 Clemens (Art History); Henry Richards, 910 Clemens (Modern Languages and Literatures); Barbara Tedlock, 365 Millard Fillmore Academic Center (Anthropology); Tamara Thornton, 546 Park (History); Wolfgang Wolck, 629 Baldy (Linguistics). 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. MARION DICKINSON SCHOLARSHIP The Marion Dickinson Scholarship for Academic Excellence is open to anthropology majors in their junior year. The deadline for application is April 15, 1994. Send letters of nomination to S. Milisauskas, Chair, Dept. of Anthropology, 380 Fillmore, Buffalo, N.Y. 14261. NOMINEES SOUGHT FOR OUTSTANDING SERVICE AWARDS Current full-time professional staff employees of UB, the Research Foundation, the UB Foundation, or the Faculty-Student Association who have completed two years of continuous full-time professional staff service are eligible for the Outstanding Service Award. Members of the UB community who wish to submit nominations for the Outstanding Service Award must prepare a dossier in support of the nominee, including a maximum of five letters of support, the nominator's overview, the nominee's current vita statement and current position description signed by the nominee's supervisor, as well as a nomination form. Nominations must be received by Friday, April 21, 1995 and may be submitted to: Ilene Fleischmann, Chair, Professional Staff Senate Awards Committee, 310 O'Brian Hall, North Campus, 645-2107 or 645-6115. Winners receive a $1,000 cash award, certificate of recognition, and will be honored at an awards luncheon on May 17. UNIVERSITY CHOIR ITALY-BOUND Fund-raising efforts for the University Choir's concert tour of Italy are underway and include a cassette tape sale. Cassette tapes of the UB Choir, highlighting performances from 1972-92, are priced at $12 each or two for $20 and are available at the Bookstore or directly from the UB Foundation Choir. Tape 1 features music from the 18th and 19th centuries plus Christmas, folk, and pop selections. Tape 2 includes Renaissance selections and compositions from the 20th century. Call 645-2964 WORKOUT FOR AIDS Join the fun and show your support for AIDS and related Cancer research on Saturday, April 8 during the Workout for Aids at the Alumni Arena, North Campus, from 10 a.m. to Noon. All proceeds will benefit the City of Hope National Medical Center and Beckman Research Institute. Call 691-5676. Jobs RESEARCH Assistant Director of Research for Major Donor Prospects- University Development, Posting #R-95022. Assistant Director of Research for Prospect Records-University Development, Posting #R-95023. Research Secretary-University Development, Posting #R-95024. Director of Budget-University Development, Posting #R-95025. Research Technician (half-time)-Anatomy & Cell Biology, Posting #R-95026. Secretary II (60% position)-Office of Controller, Posting #R-95027. Associate Director, Regional Development-University Development, Posting #R-95028. Assistant Director of Corporate and Foundation Relations-Development, Posting #R-95029. Research Support Specialist-Oral Biology, Posting #R-95030. PROFESSIONAL Residence Hall Director(s) (Internal Promotional Opportunity SL-2)-Residential Life, Posting #P-5007. Programmer Analyst (Internal Promotional Opportunity, SL-3)-Computing & Information Technology, Posting #P-5009. Application Developer (Internal Promotional Opportunity, SL-3)-Computing & Information Technology, Posting #P-5010. To obtain more information on jobs listed above, contact Personnel Services, 104 Crofts Hall.