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argus vol 11l buffalo new york march 27 1950 no 18 otc makes dormitory report recommendations made based on poll moving of the professional schools to the campus would result in se vere overcrowding of already sati ated rooming facilities near ub this would inevitably force a large number of students to live further and further from the campus — an eventuality that would discourage out-of-town students to register at ub perhaps the most weighty ar gument of all for the immediate construction of dormitories was the mention of the obvious fact that the enrollment at the university is decreasing and will continue to do so in the near future a logical means of mitigating this situation is to provide facilities designed to attaract an increasing number of non-buffalo students the report was taken under con sideration by the board at friday night's board of managers meeting the out-of-towners club acting as the board's dormitory committee announced the results of its poll conducted last semester see argus nov 19 1949 to determine the probable amount of revenue a new dormitory might be ex pected to bring in the poll was concerned with the number of students now on campus who would be interested in living in a dorm what they are paying for room rent at the present and what they would be willing to pay for dormitory quarters the otc's report consisted of the re sults of the poll and recommendations based on these the was to of 1 town whose i names were the h students re i the how 1 were by females and i these h as was that h a large i their types h to meaningful i then i were results i a 20 constituc i a percentage i a large fairly i any re h may be accurately h over the the average pres i booming expenses was 6.07 h the 1t3 h willingness i to pay 7.00 or more for dormitory h rent this would to 225 i per if i these figures are to in i elude students i who be on campus i the mean i that out about esti h town university i population be to i pay or more to dor i the elements in i the concluded h was ex i 400 students pay i weekly dormitory rooms i rooms as soon as become i work i the recommended that i the can the i costs are in h revenues forthcom i be con i to 400 stu i dents to be built i the dormi i tory be proportioned i for male fe i in they the con i these will i have to be modern functional i the on utility i dur i of great h should i not be sacrificed for appearance if i are constructed i they be on the i the campus this is i necessary that the con i between thl h modern i less i other arguments con i dormitories were ad i was mentioned that the i lack of cooperation hinders gac work in the general activities council meeting last thursday march 23 various committees submitted their initial reports for the work accom plished these reports indicate that a great deal of successful work had been done mostly in the face of great difficulties however lack of cooperation on the part of many campus organizations has thus far made the work of the gac much more complicated than it has to be again the delegates of many or ganizations were found absent from the meeting this fact might be partly due to late notices but it can largely be only explained with lack of interest this is very detri mental not only to the very im portant work the gac is doing but also to student activities n general the next meeting will be held on thursday march 30 at 3:30 in norton union auditorium it is essential that all organizations recognized on campus send a dele gate to this meeting as important decisions will be voted on as the general activities council has the purpose of coordinating the various campus organizations it is abso lutely necessary that it receives much more cooperation from them in the future than it has received ' in the past it is hoped that all activities recognize their responsi bility to appoint a representative to the gac and see to it that this delegate be present every meeting in the future dr cantor conducts workshop dr nathaniel f cantor head of the department of sociology and anthropology at the university of buffalo conducted an intensive workshop last friday and satur day at the university of maine for faculty members interested in introducing discussion techniques in their classrooms the invitation to conduct the workshop was extended to dr cantor by maine president artha a hauck as a result of a uni versity committee's study of dr cantor's book the dynamics of learning human growth film to be shown the controversial film human growth will be shown thursday march 30 at 8 p.m in hayes audi torium hayes hall the film spon sored jointly by the americans veterans committee and the ar gus will be accompanied by a panel of experts who will discuss its educational value and attempt to answer all questions from tho audience this panel consists of dr ken neth m alford a prominent pedi atrician dr carlton scofield the chairman of the ub psychology department alvin gouldner.'soci ology instructor and rabbi elihu rickel i the film will be open to all no admission will be charged board of managers election tabulation march 15 1950 officers president a.s b.a ed eng ph m d law total millane j v jr 440 148 16 71 46 45 43 138 947 good raymond 246 177 15 246 82 48 9 8 831 vice-president breach theodore 487 263 23 229 101 75 32 76 1286 secretary allan shirley 487 270 22 229 98 76 34 74 1290 members at-large ' mcneill roger '. 317 202 16 139 74 46 28 33 855 pye a kenneth 340 164 14 128 56 36 11 21 770 o'brien william 257 143 10 145 78 38 25 76 772 nadolny barbara 276 156 13 109 50 37 19 27 687 bogulski dolores 245 121 10 121 66 44 17 47 671 pugh charles 252 202 17 105 52 10 14 10 662 hausauer portia 259 158 13 94 53 22 12 33 644 bass marvin 263 74 4 64 27 34 15 63 544 jassin samuel 269 71 3 49 34 27 7 64 524 mason jerome 181 65 4 128 34 12 15 64 503 jackman richard 231 58 8 77 15 13 10 69 48c newton kenneth 181 60 2 79 38 26 17 31 437 ■douglas clifford 90 74 2 42 16 19 26 13 282 krist matthew 38 18 4 29 12 13 6 112 232 hohensee edward 73 9 4 40 24 19 9 13 191 reeber erick 50 21 1 31 13 12 3 5 136 cretkos james 37 16 2 15 9 26 4 9 118 total vote 703 340 32 318 149 166 104 158 1971 indicates winning candidates school representatives arts and sciences resnik harvey 305 heidenburg gerald 287 mccausland bruce hi dental evans robert jr 33 maloney edward 22 besser paul 17 haar jean '. 16 redstone joseph 16 pharmacy hooley gerald 90 barone dorothy 39 smith allan 20 engineering smith gene 183 canty john 135 education o'reilly edwin 24 jeacock donald 6 crone bibiana 2 medicine ploss robert 86 constantine herbert 55 voltman john 25 law troy thomas .' 113 sworobuk james 45 business administration hawkins robert 194 swagler leonard 146 inter-varsity christian fellowship miss gladys hamilton of the buffalo hebrew-christian mission will be inter varsity's guest speaker at their march 28 meeting jewish missions will be miss hamilton's topic everyone is invited to attend this meeting which will be held in the west room of norton on tuesday tomorrow evening at 7:30 sharp in the drinking well that the plumber built her aunt eliza fell we must buy a filter i how do you define unaware it's the last thing i take off at night - meeting notice there will be an important meeting for all argus mem bers at 3:30 p.m on wednesday march 29 in the argus office the attendance of all members is essential programs to be filed april 3-may 6 preliminary programs for the fall semester should be filed between april 3 and may 6 at the univer sity registrar's office by students currently registered in the college of arts and sciences and the school of education who also expect to attend the summer session they should file their programs as fol lows seniors and juniors april 3 — may 6 sophomores , . april 10 — may 6 freshmen april 17 — may 6 all students who do not expect to attend the summer session should file preliminary programs for the fall between april 24 and may 6 forms and general instructions may be obtained at the university registrar's office attention juniors and seniors juniors and seniors in the col lege of arts and sciences school of business administration school of education and school of engi neering who have not filed an ap plication for degree card should do so at the office of the univer sity registrar before april 15 m.u.d plans underway fanfare and energetic planning highlighted the initial day of prep arations for ub's 1950 moving-up day which is to be held may 6 the fanfare was provided last fri day in norton union by paul lips powell and his dixieland band who heralded the coming of what promises to be a m.u.d sur passing any that this city has seen in the past the planning was done by this year's m.u.d committee who announced that the theme this spring will be what's in store for fifty more the committee has reported that excellent response has been re ceived from the main street store merchants who have been asked to decorate their store windows in the m.u.d spirit in order to bring about city - wide interest in this year's parade each organization is invited to enter a float in the m.u.d parade applications for floats may be ob tained at the candy counter in norton union the deadline for applications is april 3 sam service the sigma alpha mu fraternity takes great pleasure in announcing the annual interfaith service to be held at temple beth zion 599 tjelaware ave on march 24 8 p.m it is our purpose in presenting this service to promote inter-reli gious understanding you are cordially invited to at tend this service in an act of ob servance of brotherhood the braes of ma welton are famous for bon comrades march 30tk ; to april 1st dorms here's hoping
Object Description
| Rating | |
| Collection ID | BUF002 |
| Collection Title | University at Buffalo Student Newspapers |
| Item ID | argus-1950-03-27 |
| Title | Argus, 1950-03-27 |
| Publication Title | Argus |
| Masthead | Argus Vol. 3 No. 18 |
| Date of Original | 1950-03-27 |
| Month | 03 |
| Day | 27 |
| Year | 1950 |
| Publisher of Original | University of Buffalo |
| Institution | State University of New York at Buffalo |
| Description | An archive of the Argus student newspaper from the University of Buffalo in New York. |
| Subject | University of Buffalo Student Newspaper Archive |
| Language | English |
| Source of Original | Microfilm |
| Material Type of Original | Student newspaper |
| DCMI Type | Text |
| Coverage | United States, New York, Erie County, Buffalo |
| Date of Digital | 8/21/2008 2:30:44 PM |
| Format of Digital | JP2 |
| Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 300 dpi. The original file size was |
| Publisher of Digital | State University of New York at Buffalo |
| Rights Management | Public domain |
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