Reporter Volume 26, No.22 March 30, 1995 Thursday 30 Teaching Effectiveness Workshop Multiculturalism in the Classroom. 218 Talbert. North Campus. Free. Sponsored by the Office of Teaching Effectiveness. To register, call 645-3364 or E-mail to v443tplx@ubvms. Cardiopulmonary Center Seminar Chronic Adaptation to Myocardial Ischemia, Dr. John Canty, Dept. of Medicine. 108 Sherman. South Campus. 8 a.m. Ukrainian Week Display and Sale of Ukrainian Crafts. Student Union Lobby. North Campus. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Life Workshop The World of E-mail, Jim Gerland. 2:30-4:30 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Pharmaceutics Seminar Relationships Between Nitro-L-Arginine Concentration and Hemodynamic Effects in Anesthetized Rats, Mohammed A. Tabrizi-Fard. C508 Cooke. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Physics Colloquium Cosmic Strings, Prof. Alexander Vilenkin, Tufts Univ. 245 Fronczak. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Biological Sciences Seminar Connections between Origins of Replication and Origins of Cancer, Dr. David G. Kaufman, Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 114 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop Dreams and Unhealthy Cultural Values: Part 2, Pat L. Smith. Second session. 4-6 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Mathematics Colloquium Bialgebra Actions, Twists, and Universal Deformation Formulas, Prof. Tony Giaquinto, Univ. of Michigan. 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 session. Call 829-3291 for registration information; registration deadline is five working days before each session. Life Workshop Hate Speech and Harassment, Lucinda Finley, J.D. 5-7 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Biomedical Research Colloquia Scientific Misconduct: Fraud and Plagiarism, David Triggle, Ph.D. Dean, School of Pharmacy. Butler Auditorium, Sherman. South Campus. 5:15-7:15 p.m. UUAB Film Series Megazone 23 Part I. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Poetry reading Charles Bernstein, Robert Creeley, Susan Howe. Unitarian Universalist Church, 695 Elmwood Ave. 7 p.m. $3, $5. Benefit for Atmosphere. Computer Seminar Internet Clinic: Government Resources. 110 Lockwood. North Campus. 7 p.m. To register call 645-2817. Ukrainian Week Explosive Issues in Ukrainian-Russian Relations, Peter Potichnyj, Ph.D., McMaster Univ., Hamilton, Ont. 205 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 7 p.m. Free. Musical Theater Godspell, Zodiaque Dance Company and Gemms Musical Theatre Company. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. UUAB Film Series Megazone 23 Part II. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Friday 31 Pediatric Grand Rounds Clinical Implications of the Molecular and Cell Biology of Polycystic Kidney Disease, Ellis Avner, M.D., Prof. of Pediatrics and Chief of Pediatric Nephrology, Seattle Washington. 8 a.m. Kinch Aud., Children's Hospital. Cognitive Science Colloquium Teaching and Multiplication Tables to a Neural Network: Flexibility vs. Accuracy, Prof. James A. Anderson, Brown Univ. 280 Park. North Campus. 10:30 a.m. Ukrainian Week Ukrainian Arts and Crafts. Student Union Lobby. North Campus. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Evolutionary Biology and Ecology Lecture The Influence of Hunting Upon the Frequency of Warfare Among Hunter-Gatherers, Prof. Keith Otterbein, Dept. of Anthropology. 261 Millard Fillmore. North Campus. 11:30 a.m. open house School of Nursing Open House. 825 Kimball Tower. South Campus. 1:30-4:30 p.m. For information, call 829-3209. Spring Seminar Series: Substance Use in Adolescence Alcohol Use and Risky Sex: A New Look at Old Evidence, Mary Gillmore, Ph.D., Univ. of Washington, Seattle, Washington. Research Institute on Addictions seminar room. 1:30 p.m. Free and open to the public. Call 887-2566. Literary Lecture Wallace Stevens and the Pragmatist Tradition, Prof. Jonathan A. Levin, Columbia University. 309 Clemens. North Campus. 2 p.m. Free. Computer Science Lecture Large-Scale Assembly of DNA Strings, Prof. Rao Kosaraju, Johns Hopkins Univ. 4 Knox. North Campus. 3 p.m. Medicinal Chemistry Seminar Alzheimer's Disease -- Drug Design, Synthesis, and Evaluation, Timothy Fahrenholtz, Dept. of Medicinal Chemistry. 121 Cooke. North Campus. 3 p.m. Economics Seminar Bargaining-Induced Demand for Fiat Money, Merwan Engineer, Univ. of Guelph. 414 Fronczak. North Campus. 3:30 p.m. Physics Seminar Should the Entropy Always Be Extensive? Prof. Constantino Tsallis, CNPq, Brazil. 222 Natural Sciences & Mathematics. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Chemistry Colloquium Complexes of HF and HCl with Chloromethanes, Prof. Janet Del Bene, Youngstown State Univ. 215 Natural Sciences & Mathematics Complex. North Campus. 4 p.m. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies Redefining Genders, Values, Communities. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 5-6:30 p.m. Free. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies How to Look at Pornography, or, A Response to the Recent Cultural Wars, Prof. Laura Kipnes, Northwestern Univ. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 6:30-8:30 p.m. Free. UUAB Film Series Macross II. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 6:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Woman Power Conference Woman Power in the 21st Century Act II conference. Slee Hall. North Campus. 6:45 p.m. registration; dramatic presentation, 8 p.m.; reception, 9:30 p.m. Sponsored by Project WIN. Call 645-3705. Buffalo Philharmonic Orchestra Brahms's German Requiem, Maximiano Valdes, conducting; Buffalo Philharmonic Chorus, Thomas Swan, director. Center for the Arts Mainstage. North Campus. 8 p.m. $20, $30, $35. Call 885-5000 or 645-ARTS. Gaming Convention UBCon '95 -- A Twist in Time. Student Union. North Campus. 8 p.m.-midnight $5-$12. Call 645-4106 or 645-4884. Musical Theater Godspell, Zodiaque Dance Company and Gemms Musical Theatre Company. Drama Theatre, Center for the Arts. North Campus. 8 p.m. $5, $10. UUAB Film Series Robot Carnival. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 and 11:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Saturday 1 GSEAA Employment Conference Job Planning in the Nineties. Kiva, Baldy. North Campus. 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Free admission. Call 645-2491 to register. Woman Power Conference Woman Power in the 21st Century Act II conference. Knox. North Campus. 8:30 a.m. welcoming remarks, Rose Sconiers, state Supreme Court judge and WIN project director. Sponsored by Project WIN. Workshop sessions follow. Call 645-3705. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies Revolutionary Bracketing. 280 Park Hall. North Campus. 9-11 a.m. Free. Gaming Convention UBCon '95 -- A Twist in Time. Student Union. North Campus. 10 a.m.-midnight $5-$12. Call 645-4106 or 645-4884. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies Reading Contemporary Marxisms. 280 Park Hall. North Campus. 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Free. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies On the Politics of Art. 280 Park Hall. North Campus. 2:30-4 p.m. Free. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies Constructing Alternatives. 280 Park Hall. North Campus. 4-5:30 p.m. Free. Mus.B. Degree Recital Daniel Boring, guitar. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 5 p.m. Free. Mr. Boring is a student of Prof. Joanne Castellani. Graduate Conference in Marxist Studies History is What Hurts: Historicizing Post-Colonial Feminist Critique of Science in Development, Meera Nanda, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. 280 Park Hall. North Campus. 5:30-6:30 p.m. Free. UUAB Film Series Robot Carnival. 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. Pop Music Bobby McFerrin's Hard Choral. Center for the Arts Mainstage. North Campus. 8 p.m. $16, $20. Call 645-ARTS. UUAB Film Series Megazone 23 Part I. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 and 11:30 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. Sunday 2 Gaming Convention UBCon '95 -- A Twist in Time. Student Union. North Campus. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. $5-$12. Call 645-4106 or 645-4884. Musical Program Favored Operatic Arias and Ensembles, Denise Blackmore, mezzosoprano; Cheryl Hudson, soprano; Timothy Schuman, tenor; Thomas Witakowski, bass; Linda Mabry, pianist/accompanist. Sponsored by the Western New York Chapter of The Kosciuszko Foundation. Katharine Cornell Theater. 2 p.m. $15. Call 688-4427. M.M. Degree Recital Thomas Furminger, percussion. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 3 p.m. Free. Mr. Furminger is a student of Prof. Jan Williams. Piano Recital Ralf Gothoni, pianist. Slee Concert Hall. North Campus. 7 p.m. $7. 50, $15. Free to QRS "friends." 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 3 Biochemistry Seminar Human Cellular Factors in Papilloma Virus DNA Replication, Tom Melendy. 134B Farber. South Campus. 4 p.m. Computer clinic Veronica and Yahoo. 223 Lockwood. North Campus. 7 p.m. Preregistration required; call 645-2817. Life Workshop Dynamic Meditation: Move Into Relaxation, Dawn Jordan. 7-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Tuesday 4 Computer Clinic Veronica and Yahoo. 223 Lockwood. North Campus. 10 a.m. Call 645-2817 to register. Student Voice Recital Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. Noon. Free. Students of Gary Burgess, Sylvia Dimiziani, Daniel McCabe, Harriet Simons. Brown Bag Reading Series An Evening Walk, by Teresa Marichal. Center for the Arts Rehearsal Workshop. North Campus. 12:30-1:30 p.m. Free admission. Life Workshop When, Why and How of Breast Self Examination, Power Advocates. 6-7 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. Life Workshop Stressbusters, Power Advocates. 7-9 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Coffeehouse Presented by UUAB. Harriman Hall. South Campus. 8 p.m. Ensemble Series UB Jazz Combo, Louis Marino, conductor. Baird Recital Hall. North Campus. 8 p.m. Free. Wednesday 5 Alumni Event Dinner and speaker for Southtowns alumni. Call 829-2608. UB at Sunrise The Splintering Metropolis, Prof. David C. Perry, School of Architecture Dept. of Planning. Center for Tomorrow. North Campus. 7:30 a.m. $8, $9. Call 829-2608 for reservation. Pharmacy Seminar Penicillin Resistant Streptococcus Pneumonia: Prevalence and Therapeutic Implications, John Ahern. 248 Cooke. North Campus. 8-9 a.m. Life Workshop Stress Management, UB Counseling Center Staff. Noon-1 p.m. Call 645-6125 for registration information. Roswell Park Staff Seminar Pending, Debashis Ghosh, Ph.D. RPCI. North Campus. 12:30 p.m. Cognitive Science Colloquium Modal Structure and Perceptual Inferences, Prof. Allan Jepson, Univ. of Toronto. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 2 p.m. Chemical Engineering Linde Seminar Series The Art of Bridging Communication Gaps Between Cells: Intercellular Channels as Biological Diodes, Protein Insulators and Selective Conduits, Bruce J. Nicholson. 206 Furnas. North Campus. 3:45 p.m. Biochemical Pharmacology Seminar Regulation of Gene Expression in Stress in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Prof. Daniel J. Kosman, Dept. of Biochemistry. 307 Hochstetter. North Campus. 4 p.m. Hourani Lecture #2 Wittgenstein, Tolstoy, and the Meaning of Life, Caleb Thompson. 684 Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m. Logic Colloquium The Grelling Paradox, Volker Peckhaus, Univ. or Erlangen. 112 Baldy. North Campus. 4 p.m. Call 881-1640, 645-2438. Wednesdays at 4 Plus Lecture: Witt -- Watt: The Language of Resistance/The Resistance of Language, Marjorie Perloff, Phi Beta Kappa Visiting Scholar. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 4 p.m. Life Workshop The Job Interview: The Recruiter's Perspective, Louis Izzo. 4-5:30 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. Film and Video Margaret Mead Film and Video Festival. Center for the Arts Screening Room. North Campus. 7 p.m. Free. Opus: Classics Live Clarinet, Soprano, Cello, Piano, Susan Wells, Cheryl Hudson, Joel Becktell, Linda Mabry. Allen Hall. South Campus. 7 p.m. Free admission. UUAB Film Series Star Trek, Generations. Student Union Theater. North Campus. 9 p.m. $2, $3.50. Call 645-2957. 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. Honorary Dinner Buffalo Law Review Dinner, honoring Thomas E. Headrick, professor of law and senior counselor to UB President William Greiner. Guest speaker, Hon. Hugh B. Scott, U.S. Magistrate, Western District of New York. Classics V Banquet and Conference Center, 2425 Niagara Falls Blvd. Cocktails, 6 p.m.; dinner, 7 p.m. $40. 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. 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. "IN-HOUSE CONVERSATION" begins student show An exhibit of recent student works in conjunction with the national accreditation team's review opens April 3 in the James Dyett Exhibition Hall, third floor, Hayes Hall, South Campus. On Wednesday, April 5, students will host the exhibit, presented as an "in-house conversation." Gallery hours are Mondays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., and Tuesdays through Fridays 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 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. 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. DINE HEALTHY DEBUTS A software presentation of DINE Healthy, a full-featured diet improvement software program for both Windows and Macintosh that teaches sensible eating, nutrition and exercise strategies debuts at the UBMicro Training Center on Friday, April 7 from 10 a.m.-Noon. Darwin Dennison, Ed.D., Certified Nutrition Specialist, will make the technical presentation. Please RSVP by April 5; call 645-3348. FULBRIGHT GRANT COMPETITION OPENS Opening of competition for 1996-97 Fulbright Grants for graduate study in academic fields and professional training in the creative and performing arts is May 1. Fulbright Grants are available for study or research; travel grants are available to selected countries to supplement sources that do not provide funds for international travel or to supplement the applicant's personal funds. Applicants must be U.S. citizens 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. GRADUATE Student 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 university 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, 733 Clemens, John Peradotto, 712 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. 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 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 Research Technician I (part-time)-Biochemistry, Posting #R-95018. Research Analyst (50% position)-Archaeological Survey/Anthropology, Posting #R-95020. Senior Instructional Specialist-Biological Sciences, Posting #R-95021. 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. PROFESSIONAL Residence Hall Director(s) (Internal Promotional Opportunity, SL-2)-Residential Life, Posting #P-5007. Assistant for UB/SUNY Services (Internal Promotional Opportunity, SL-2)-Office of Trademarks and Licensing, Posting #P-5008. To obtain more information on jobs listed above, contact Personnel Services, 104 Crofts Hall.