Next
week's issue is last of semester
Next week's Reporter will be the final issue of the fall semester.
Regular publication will resume on Jan. 24.
UB installs
phone line for closing information
The university has installed a new telephone service to provide information
when office hours and class schedules will be altered as the result
of inclement weather or for other reasons.
The information
will be available at 645-NEWS to students, faculty and staff, as well
as the public, 24 hours a day. There never will be a busy signal since
the line has the capacity to handle an unlimited number of calls simultaneously.
The standard
recorded message will be "Offices are open and classes are being held
as scheduled today at the University at Buffalo." The message will be
changed appropriately as soon as university officials decide to alter
office hours and class schedules due to weather conditions or other
situations.
Workshop
location changed to Diefendorf
Due to the unexpectedly large attendance at the NIH grantsmanship lecture
series sponsored by the Office of the Vice President for Research, the
location for today's lecture on the South Campus has been changed to
148 Diefendorf Hall. The lectures had been held in the Lippschutz Room,
125 Biomedical Education Building.
The time
of the lecture, from 4-6 p.m., will remain the same. Registration is
not required. The lecture is open to all faculty, professional staff,
students and fellows.
The series
of workshops is designed for faculty members who want to learn the "ins
and outs" of applying for National Institutes for Health grants.
Today's
lecture is entitled "How to Write a Winning Proposal, Part II: Specific
Aims Page, the Research Plan, the Budget." Materials based on the lecture
series will be posted online at http://www.research.buffalo.edu/events/nih/nih_workshops.htm.
The series will culminate on Wednesday with mock study sessions to be
conducted by NIH scientific review administrators who will fly in from
NIH headquarters in Bethesda, Md., specifically for the event.
Pre-registration
is required for the mock study sessions. Seating is limited; therefore,
only faculty may attend.
Anyone
interested in participating in the mock study sessions may contact Joseph
Cusker at 645-3321 or cusker@research.buffalo.edu
to pre-register.
Landlord-tenant
forum planned
The second annual Community Forum presented by the University Community
Initiative's Regional Community Policing Center (RCPC) will be held
from 6:30-8:30 p.m. today in Allen Hall on the South Campus.
This year's
topic will be landlord-tenant issues in the neighborhood surrounding
the UB South Campus.
The forum
will provide landlords, tenants and other interested residents with
an opportunity to identify and discuss issues related to rental properties.
Representatives of organizations that deliver housing, advocacy, community
improvement or other services to help resident enjoy safe and affordable
housing or improve the quality of neighborhood life will be on hand
to answer participants' questions and offer information on resources
available to community members.
Co-sponsors
of the event are the UB Office of Student Unions & Activities and Housing
Opportunities Made Equal (HOME).
CFA
to present "Sheila the Great"
The Center for the Arts will present a musical production of Judy Blume's
popular novel, "Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great," at 2 p.m. Dec.
9 in the Mainstage theater in the CFA, North Campus.
Part of
the CFA's Family Adventure series, the production by the ArtsPower National
Touring Theatre is sponsored by Adelphia Media Services and WJYE-FM.
Free kids
activities will be provided one hour before the performance.
ArtsPower,
one of America's pre-eminent producers of professional theater for young
and family audiences, will bring to life Blume's novel in its newest
musical about young Sheila Tubman, the unlikely but extremely likable
heroine whose life growing up is always unpredictable.
The production
was adapted and directed by ArtsPower's resident playwright, Greg Gunning,
with music by Richard DeRosa and lyrics by Gunning.
Tickets
for "Otherwise Known as Sheila the Great" are $12 for adults and $10
for children 12 and under, and may be purchased at the CFA box office
from noon to 6 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, and at all Ticketmaster
locations.
NIH
funds training grant
Faculty members in the School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences have
received a five-year, $231,000 training grant from the National Institutes
of Health to support summer research fellowships for medical students.
The grant
will fund stipends for eight first-and second-year medical students
to spend 10 weeks during their summer sessions performing a mentored
research project that focuses on infectious diseases, microbiology or
immunology. Twenty UB faculty members with active, funded research programs
will serve as a pool of mentors for students.
Principal
investigator on the grant is Timothy F. Murphy, professor of medicine
and microbiology, director of the Division of Infectious Diseases in
the medical school and chief of infectious diseases at the Veterans
Administration Medical Center. Co-principal investigators are Stanley
A. Schwartz, professor of medicine, pediatrics and microbiology, and
director of the Division of Allergy/Immunology in the medical school,
and Charles M. Severin, associate professor of pathology and anatomical
sciences, and assistant dean for students in the medical school.
Bequest
pledge to provide scholarships to study aging
Bernard and Sharon Morton, longtime supporters of UB, have made a $100,000
bequest pledge to the School of Social Work for scholarships to help
graduate students who want to specialize in the field of aging and gerontology.
The Mortons
view their gift as benefiting students in need, while also helping support
an increasingly important area of research.
The Morton
Family Endowment will provide scholarships to students engaged in graduate
studies in the School of Social Work, with preference given to those
who live in Western New York, and who have "demonstrated the academic
capacity to complete the curriculum."
Lawrence
Shulman, dean of the School of Social Work, praised the Mortons, noting:
"We are indebted to their generosity and vision in contributing to the
field of aging and gerontology. Their gift is immeasurable, providing
students an opportunity to further their education, while also helping
UB expand these areas of study."
The Mortons,
who are both retired and living in Florida, remain active by volunteering
for several charitable organizations, and pursuing their hobby, traveling,
which has taken them to every continent in the world during the past
45 years.
Their gift
is part of UB's $250 million campaign, one of the largest ever conducted
by a public university in New York and New England. Although it's the
fifth major fund-raising campaign conducted by UB, it's the first national/international
and university-wide campaign, and the first to be alumni-driven, with
campaign volunteer leaders from all over the country. Funds raised will
be used to enrich academic programs, support students ranging from undergraduates
to post-doctoral students, and to enhance university life.
Chancellor's
Award nominations sought
Nominations are being sought for the 2001 Chancellor's Awards for Excellence
in Professional Service. This prestigious award provides university-wide
recognition of superlative performance and outstanding achievement by
professional staff members.
In order
to be nominated, individuals must be serving in full-time professional-service
capacities, with more than 50 percent of the assignment in non-teaching
services. Nominees must have completed at least three years of continuous,
full-time professional (not classified) service in the position for
which they are nominated.
A nominator,
who may be any member of the university community, must prepare a nomination
package that includes a current vitae on the nominee's professional
career, an updated position description, a maximum of five letters of
supportwith at least one each from a supervisor, a colleague and a
constituentand the nominator's summary letter of support.
Deadline
for completed dossiers is Jan. 23, 2002. For nomination packets and
guidelines, call Anna Kedzierski at 645-2003. For more information,
call Christine Sauciunac at 645-3544.
Brickman
concert to benefit Food Bank
Pianist/composer Jim Brickman will perform at 7:30 p.m. Dec. 17 in the
Mainstage theater in the Center for the Arts, North Campus, in a concert
to benefit the Food Bank of Western New York.
The event
is being presented by the CFA and soft rock 96.1, WJYE-FM.
Admission
is free, but cash donations will be accepted at the door for the Food
Bank. Tickets will be general admission and only available the night
of performance; tickets will be distributed on a first-come, first-serve
basis. Doors will open at 6:30 p.m. for the 7:30 p.m. performance. Brickman
will sign autographs in the theater lobby following the concert.
The performance
will coincide with the release of a new recording, book and song by
Brickman, all called "Simple Things."
"It's mostly
about opening your eyes," explains Brickman. "You've got to get off
the treadmill and find your life again."
For more
information, call 645-ARTS.
UB work
helps firm win award,
Chemical Processing magazine has selected Integument Technologies of
Tonawanda to receive its 2001 Vaaler Award in the category of corrosion
control for its innovative FluoroGrip¨ product, developed using technology
licensed from UB.
Integument
Technologies is a science-based developer and manufacturer of engineered
fluoropolymer systems for unique, extreme temperature and chemical environments.
FluoroGrip®
was developed using chemistry and processes developed at UB that provide
the ability to chemically bond adhesives, sealants, coatings and lining
materials, creating a new cost-effective generation of composite corrosion-protective
systems.
The technology
that led to creation of Integument's FluoroGrip® product lines was
co-developed by Joseph A. Gardella Jr., professor of chemistry, and
Terrence G. Vargo, former UB research assistant and Integument Technologies
president and CEO. UB's former Technology Transfer and Licensing office,
now part of the university's Office of Science, Technology Transfer
and Economic Outreach, licensed the technology to Integument.
Integument
Technologies continues its advancement in the chemical industry by partnering
with UB to access its wealth of knowledge, laboratories and testing
facilities. Today, Integument uses facilities on the North Campus for
new technology and product development, in addition to using the testing
facilities at the South Campus Instrumentation Center.