No
Reporter next week due to spring break
The Reporter will not publish next week due to spring break.
The next issue will be published on April 4.
Laychock
to direct research efforts
Suzanne G. Laychock, professor and associate chair of the Department
of Pharmacology and Toxicology in the School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences, has been appointed senior associate dean for research and
biomedical education at the medical school.
Laychock,
a member of the UB faculty since 1989, is an accomplished researcher
with more than 80 publications. In addition to serving as associate
chair of her department since 1995, she was co-director of the Institute
for Research and Education on Women and Gender (IREWG).
She
holds bachelor's and master's degrees in biology from Brooklyn College,
City University of New York, and earned a doctorate in pharmacology
from the Medical College of Virginia. In 1990, she was selected as the
outstanding STAR alumnus at the medical college.
Laychock
serves as associate editor of the journal Lipids and was associate
editor of Endocrine Research from 1992-2001. She also has served
as field editor for the Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental
Therapeutics and on the editorial board of Diabetes.
Her
research into endocrine pharmacology with an emphasis on the cellular
mechanisms regulating insulin secretion has been funded since 1979.
She is a member of several professional societies, including the American
Diabetes Association, the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental
Therapeutics and the Endocrine Society.
OUI
to sponsor forum
The Office of Urban Initiatives Inc. (OUI), a non-profit organization
that includes as one of its members the Center for Urban Studies in
the School of Architecture and Planning, will sponsor a community forum
on economic development issues from 5:30-8 p.m. March 28 in the Advanced
Training Center, 275 Oak St., Buffalo.
The
forum will provide information about the services offered by the major
economic development agencies in Western New York. Participants will
include the Small Business Administration, the Buffalo Economic Renaissance
Corp., Erie County Industrial Development Agency and the Black Chamber
of Commerce.
The
cost of the forum is $10 for OUI members and $15 for non-members. For
reservations, call 829-2714.
No
Doubt to perform
No Doubt, the popular ska-pop band featuring lead singer Gwen Stefani,
will perform on April 12 in Alumni Arena with special guest, The Faint,
as part of its "Rock Steady Road Tour."
Doors
will open at 7 p.m. for the concert.
Presented
by MTV, UUAB/SBI, Inc., in conjunction with WKSE Kiss 98.5, the band
is promoting the December 2001 release of its latest album, "Rock Steady,"
which already has sold more than 1 million copies, making the band's
third album certified platinum.
The
album's first single, "Hey Baby," featuring dancehall rapper Bounty
Killer, currently is at number one on the Billboard Top 40 Chart. "Hella
Good" will serve as the album's next single.
Student
tickets are $5 and can be purchased at the Sub Board ticket office on
the second floor of the Student Union. There is a limit of four tickets
to every student ID presented.
Tickets
for the general public are $15 and can be purchased at any Tickets.com
location, as well as from the Sub Board ticket office. There is a limit
of 8 tickets per person.
Coe,
Nessim to lecture
A dual lecture by artists Sue Coe and Barbara Nessim will be held at
6 p.m. April 11 in the Screening Room of the Center for the Arts, North
Campus, as part of the Alan E. Cober Memorial Lecture Series.
The
lecture series is being held in conjunction with the exhibition "Alan
E. Cober: A Retrospective Afterlife," on display through May 18 in the
first floor gallery of the UB Art Gallery in the CFA.
The
lecture is free of charge and open to the public.
Cober,
an innovative and nationally distinguished illustrator, taught at UB
from 1987-96. He died in 1998 at age 62.
Coe
was to have delivered the inaugural lecture in the series on Feb. 15,
but it was postponed due to illness.
Her
30-year career in the U.S. has been marked by disturbing and controversial
work that illustrates her outraged stand toward various social problems.
Nessim,
an artist, illustrator and educator for more than 25 years, is chair
of the Department of Illustration at Parsons School of Design.
Employee
Assistance Program to move into full-time office
UB's Employee Assistance Program (EAP) soon will have its own office,
moving from its current location in Porter Quad in the Ellicott Complex
to 101C Fargo Quad on April 1.
Don
Kreger, EAP committee chair and university police officer, noted that
once the new office is open, the program will offer more on-site staff
during its regular business hours of 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through
Thursday. Although the new office won't be open for business for another
two weeks, Kreger said EAP coordinators can be contacted at 645-3166.
He
also announced that the UB EAP and the New York State Employee Benefits
Committee are working to inform employees about a new free benefit,
Life Works, designed to enhance EAP by providing an 800 number to call
for referral information.
The
benefit was negotiated by the unions representing SUNY employees as
part of the last bargaining agreement, he said.
Anyone
seeking more information about Life Works can call the EAP office at
645-3166.
The
EAP, available to employees, retirees and their families, offers confidential,
highly professional assistance, information and referral services for
a variety of problems and concerns, ranging from marital problems, medical
concerns and on-the-job issues to depression, alcohol and substance
abuse, stress, financial problems, child/elder care and grief and loss
counseling.
The
service is free and always confidential.
Kreger
said that monthly contacts range from a few people per month to as many
as 20, with contacts typically dropping off in the summer months.
After
Sept. 11, Kreger said EAP circulated a message on the university's list
serve and did receive a number of calls as a result. "We did get people
calling us, although we didn't get any calls directly related to Sept.
11. A lot of people who called were already on the edge of crisis. It
(Sept. 11) triggered a lot in everybody; a lot people needed help. Telephone
calls at crisis services went through the roof," he added.
EAP
also offers a 24-hour, seven-day-a-week answering service. To contact
EAP, call 645-2398 or 645-3166. Emergency crisis help also is available
by calling 834-3131.
Asian
films to be screened
"We Are Not Just Documenting History, We Are Making It," a program of
two provocative independent documentary films, will be presented by
the Asian Studies Program at 6:30 p.m. today in the Screening Room in
the Center for the Arts, North Campus.
The
program is co-sponsored by the Graduate Student Associations of the
English, American Studies, Art and Media Study departments.
The
event, which will be free of charge and open to the public, offers an
unusual opportunity to see two very different presentations, both of
which not only document political and social change, but attempt to
direct it.
"(Un)
Suitable Girls" is a film by Prerana Reddy. It documents members of
the South Asian Women's Creative Collective (SAWCC), a New York-based
arts group for women of South Asian descent, as they prepare to present
one of their startling and hilarious satirical showcases, "(Un) Suitable
Girls." (The showcase shares its name with a popular film by British
screenwriter and journalist Dolly Dingra)
The
SAWCC presentation is a biting social commentary that challenges the
age-old notion, still prevalent in parts of Asia and elsewhere, that
women are commodities to be bought, sold, advertised and owned.
In
the film, the women discuss their art and experience living within the
desi (Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi) world, while at the same time
being part of the larger American community.
The
collective, of which Reddy is a member, was founded in 1997 to present
exhibits, lectures, films and performances by South Asian women artists
and to provoke conceptual strategies for disseminating their work.
The
second film raises a warning and an alarm over the continuing and growing
problem of environmental and personnel contamination by depleted uranium.
Jawad
Metni produced and directed "Downwind: Depleted Uranium Weapons in an
Age of Virtual War," a disturbing examination of American military use
of penetrative weapons that employ depleted uranium in warfare and then
leave massive amounts of it behind on foreign soil.
These
weapons have been used extensively from Hiroshima to Iraq, Bosnia and
Afghanistan. Their principle function is to destroy personnel by penetrating
protective armor. It doesn't end there, however. The use of penetrative
weapons can create localized areas of heavy contamination by particles
small enough to be inhaled, which can result in serious physical consequences
not only for enemy military personnel, but for civilians and the very
soldiers who deploy the weapons. The toxic material remains on the ground,
presenting a long-term danger long after the American army departs.
In
a 1999 broadcast, "60 Minutes" reported that more than 600,000 tons
of depleted uranium remain on and in the ground in Iraq, and that many
tons of dust and contaminants remain in the former Yugoslavia.
UB
Green launches new Web site
UB Green, the university's environmental stewardship office, has launched
a new Web site, http://wings.buffalo.edu/ubgreen,
that is designed to serve as a resource to members of the UB community,
as well as those outside the university, who are concerned about UB's
impact on the environment.
The
site features information about UB's various green campus programs,
including the "Think Green" environmental awareness campaign, the university's
environmental policies, and energy conservation, green building design,
recycling and the buy-recycled-paper programs.
Also
featured is information about UB's nationally recognized energy conservation
program, which is credited with energy savings of more than $60 million
since the program's inception. The site also contains information on
campus energy-awareness programs and offers energy-saving tips.
UB
Green is part of University Facilities.
Dance
company to perform in CFA
The Center for the Arts will conclude the 2001-02 KeyBank Dance Series
with a performance by the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company at
8 p.m. April 20 in the Mainstage theater in the CFA on the North Campus.
Media
sponsors for the KeyBank Dance Series are Adelphia Media Services and
96.1, WJYE-FM.
The
company will be in residence at UB from April 1-20, with the dancers
offering lecture-demonstrations, workshops for UB dance students, master
classes for dancers from UB and the community, and performances for
school children. The company will perform in several area high schools,
as well as present the public dance concert on April 20.
Founded
as a multicultural dance company in 1982, Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance
Company is the product of an 11-year collaboration between Bill T. Jones
and Arnie Zane. It emerged onto the scene in 1982 with the world premiere
of "Intuitive Momentum." Since then, the 10-member company has performed
its ever-increasing repertoirecurrently more than 50 worksin
more than 130 American cities and 30 countries.
The
company's work often has been described as a fusion of dance and theater.
The repertoire is highly diverse in subject matter, visual imagery,
and length of each dance, which can range from 15 minutes to two hours.
Tickets
for Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company are $20, $16 and $12 for
the general public and $10 for UB students. Discount coupons are available
at all area KeyBank locations. Tickets are available at the CFA box
office from noon to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Fridays, and at all Ticketmaster
locations. For more information call 645-ARTS.
Long-time
UB employees to be recognized at reception, lunch
President and Mrs. William R. Greiner will host a service-recognition
reception and luncheon on April 12 honoring faculty and staff members
who have completed 30 and 40 years of service to UB.
To
be honored for 40 years of service will be Paul Binette, Medicine; Harvey
Breverman, Art; Emma Johnson, Food and Vending Services, and George
Lee, Civil Engineering/Multidisciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering
Research.
To
be recognized for 30 years of service will be Lawrence Chlebowy, Facilities
Planning and Design; Michael Cohen, Neurology; Arlene Collins, Microbiology;
Kenneth Dauber, English; Stephen Dunnett, International Education/Learning
and Instruction; John Ellison, Informatics; Carol Flaugher, Nursing;
David Gerber, History, and Jorge Gracia, Philosophy.
Also,
Keith Henry, African-American Studies; Voldemar Innus, Chief Information
Officer; Hubert Jockin, Pathology and Anatomical Sciences; Michael Kibby,
Learning and Instruction; Carolyn Korsmeyer, Philosophy; Florence Limina,
Auxiliary Services; Oren Lyons, Center for the Americas; Ann McElroy,
Anthropology, and Joyce McIntosh, Research Foundation Employment Services.
Also,
Carol Puma, State Purchasing; Mya Swanson, Social and Preventive Medicine;
Jacquelyn McGuire, Classics; Vita Milisauskas, Pathology and Anatomical
Sciences; David Pendergast, Physiology and Biophysics; Anthony Rozak,
Art; James Sondel, Nuclear Medicine; Phillips Stevens, Anthropology;
Thomas Warzel, Facilities Operations; Scott Williams, Mathematics, and
Wolfgang Wolck, Linguistics.