Spi & . . y g VOLUM E 8 - NUM BER 6 JULY- 1974 #. , : A lum ni Trustees Xs ... x. . . J& . C onable, C ulbertson A re Eleeted Jaq. +' *. : '' . w '#. C h a r l () t t e W i 1 1 i a m s . % œ . Conable, a 1951 graduate of ' S =. . . y; C o r ne I l a n d D a v i d J . 'rV. . > . * + ., > ., + . Culbertson. a 1950 graduate, . . . #4 have been elected t() five- y'ear terms on tlle Ulliversity's Board ()f Trustees by tlae Cornell Alumni Association, ' ' r ox - ,' . t The eleetion ()f the alum ni # . . . . t r tl St eeS :1.' IIS a 11 11 () tl l1CCd reeently by Frarlk 1l. Clifford, %elleral seeretary ()f the Alum ni Assoeiatioll. Nlrs. Conable and Culbertstln urill be two ()f 10 alumni eleeted members of the Board of Trustees and were selected in a FATHERI.' J'Iulu - A happy Blanchard Rideout (rizht). mail- in vote in which some Consfcncc Concble Daeid Culbertson University Marshal, embraces his son, Richard. on the commence m'-ent 23,600 ballots were east. stage in Barton Hall June 3. after Ilichard received a doctoral degree. They succeed New York S t a t e A s s e m b l y w o m a n C ornell, lthaca C ollege Constance E. Cook and 3,365 Receive D egrees M eredith C. Gourdine, an authority in the field of direct- Plan Fuxehange Program energy conversion and silver A t Spring C erem ony medalist in the 1952 Olym pic An exchange program between flornell University and lthaca Games. They did not run for re- College which will enable full- time students at one institution to

spectators speculating at Cornell's lœ th Comm encement election. take courses at the other, without extra charge ftx tuition. has exercises June 3 had a number of explanations for the M rs. Conable is the wife of been announced by the two schools. unm istakable spirit of gaiety which pervaded the cerem ony: New York State Congressm an Starting in the fall, the college and the university will '' u ay% it's because the war is oven'' Barber B. Conable Jr., and undertake a two-year experiment in exchanging undergraduate lives in Alexander.N.Y., and ''M ay> it's the beautiful weathen'' . students in fields of instruction in which opportunities exist at '' May> people can enjoy commencement for what it really is Chevy Chase, M d. Culbertson, one institution but not at the other. The program will expand - a celebration of personal achievement.'' president and chief executive curricular offerings and will thereby make m ore courses availablel. Although the weather forecasters had predicted patçhy clouds of the Xerox Education Group to Cornell and Ithaca undergraduates. A joint committee and scattered showers, the procession formed on the Arts and vice president of Xerox consisting of representatives each institution will Quadrangle and proceeded to Barton Hall under sunny skies. Corp., earned his bachelor's adm inister the exchange. Caps and gownss optional for the fourth consecutive year, were degree in English and Ithaca College President Ellis L. Phillips Jr. said, ''The worn by more than 90 per cent of the graduates. econom ics and a master's opportunity for students to enroll in courses other than those d e g r e e i n b u s i n e s s Deviating from the traditional attire were tbe master bakers offered at tbeir home institutions will, I believe, contribute from the School of Hotel Adm inistration in their high chef s hats, administration, also at Cornell, significantly to the quality of the undergraduat'e education at several engineering students in hardhats with or>nge tassels, and in 1951. He lives in Darien, both the university and the college. The exehange is also one bachelor of arts candidate in full bellydancer regalia - Conn. appealing in that it makes possible a wider variety of eourses including coin bra, veils and finger cymbals. (Continued on Page 7) without the duplication of instructional resources.'' In a brief com mencement address, University President Cornell President Dale R. Dale R. corson saidv '' It is the F rom Tdcl D onated Corson said he felt the m ission of universities such as program would be an cornell to foster in the ''im portant new step in the individuals whom they have growing intellectual dialogue edueated the understanding betsveen the two institutions. and values necessary to the Both institutions, as well as the preservation of our society.'' individual students involved in He gave a historical the program, will benefit from Perspective to the current the exchange.'' m oral crisis in America. He entreated the graduates Aecording to W illiam A. %uestion their convictiops as a Scoones. assistant provost at means of strengthening those the college, lthaca students convictions because. he said, seem to be interested iI) taking ''this nation needs m en and cotlrses at Caortlell it1 art, art women of the strongest h i s t o r y a 11 d e e r t a i n conviction.'' interdiseiplinary courses not

As the deans of the various available at the ctlllege. schools and colleges presented C o 1) ve rs e l y , p re l i m i n a ry the degree eandidates to the studies indieate that Corllell president, Dean Robert B. students may wish to enroll in M eKersie of the New York cotlrses in thc college's five State Sehool of Industrial and professional sehools and in Labor Relations cited his teacher education. students as ''One hundred GIFT' - The original me el train samuel S. Leibowitz, law ' l5, used in defending the t w e n t y - o n e f i rs t cl as s Scottsboro 'eboys'' in the famed rape case of the early 1930s is being examined by Irving Younger. Ilï order to take advantage former judge of the Civil Court of the City of New York. He was named this spring the first holder arbitrators, conciliators, peace- of the Samuel S. Leibowitz Professorship of Trial Techniques at the Law School. At right, is Albert of the new cooperative makers, m ediators and C. Neimeth, assistant dean of the Law School. lweibowjtz turned the train over to the Law School program , students will register negotiators.'' And Dean Alfred this spring. lt is an exaet replica of the train that was the scene of the alleged rape of two white with the extramural division of E. Kahn of the College of Arts girls. The model train was a key exhibit in Leibowitz's case, in whicb he was able to save the nine the other institution, after and Sciences presented what black defendants from the death sentence. The casq is a judicial Iandmark in that it ended the received approval from (Continued tm Page 7) exclusion of blacks from Southern juries. their own college or school. :.' 1',- C' prnélt kepqriï July, 1974 ' t f 1@ r .%@ t Byron Saunders Is Elected @ @ @ @ N ew C om ell Faculty D ean ,. r $ $j$ s Byron W . Saunders, a member of the College of Engineering faeulty since Robert M . M atyas was elected viœ 1947, has been named dean of the president for planning and facilities at University Faculty for a three- year ' Cornell by the Board of Trustea , , . d . . y'jy term. His election was confirm ed by uring its June meeting, effective July t ytyE 7'-s,' the University Board of Trustees at its (1 . .ythj' 'C.,gyt'. ' . r. ,t.'( ). .,:. -k . -. t yty ,, June meeting, following a mail ballot M atyas, 48, replaces Thomas W . .; C?.gj; ,. ) eleetiori by members of the Faculty. Mackesey, wbo retired June 30 as . '' , Saunders is currently serving as -. . su,r,. . #).; professor of regional planning and viœ t ï . , ., ,y ; . ;y,.y director of the School of Industrial president for planning after more than ),j,. -. ). . . . :,4: jy;j . . . , t; :, ,ë( ,q Engineering and Operatiolls

30 years on the Cornell faculty. zt' ): ojj, :. . , ,. yjj. . . . ' b ' ' ti .'. r '''?r: t 7 q j and director of continuing education at In recommending Matyas for (j. si ., '.y ,).j . ( :1 z . . ,,)' the College of Engineering. He election, President Dale R. ,' ,,L: , Corson said L-b.qst.bln,' .',, . succeeds Norman Penney, professor ol the new post represents a consolidation -77*2-./,. ' ' . ' '' ' 7 law, as dean of the Faculty. of the Office of Planning q : ! Department of Construction an, d the '2 ''#J His previous participation in I l.jljrj'liï' University affairs includes mem bership Division of Buildings and Properties. ... ? s in the Faculty Council, the

( Matyas was director of the - Administrative Board of the Cornell l' Department of Construction at Cornell , 'yl. University Council, and the University ! siace 1968 and program manager for .. Senate. He served as chairman of the tllè Arecibo Telescope upgrading . , jy, Board of Directors for the former project since 1972. A native of R*W M Cornell United Religious W ork, and at Hazleton, Pa., he earned a bachelor of the present time is faculty adviser to professor since 1957. architecture degree from Cornell in from 1954 to 1962 Saunders is a graduate of the 1952 . He was named the swim ming team . and did graduate work in business supervisor of nuclear core contracts at At the College of Engineering, University of Rhode Island in electrical iand public administration. He served that com pany in 1962. He left Bettis Saunders has served as chairman of the engineering. and received a master's 1n9 4t6h ie Army Air Corps from 1944 to Laboratory three years Iater to become Educational Policy Comm ittee and the degree in engineering from n France and Germ any. director of operations supervising Graduate Professional Program s the Stevens Institute of . A f M atyas was a supervising engineer construction of Cornell's Robert R. Comm ittee. He was chairm an of the specialist in manufacturing and or nuclear subm arines, surface ships w ilson synchrot Department of Industrial Engineering prv uction system s. he has served as a and the Shippingport Nuclear Power 1967 ron Laboratory. ln S . 68 he served as executive officer and Operations Research from 1962 to consultant to a num ber of industrial Ataötion at the W estinghouse Bettis of the laboratory of Nuclear Studies at 1967, when the school he now heads firms and has been active in several m ic Power u boratory in Pittsburgh cornell. was formed. He has been a full professional engineering societies. F reshm an Surocp.. 'A 'A eerages,C areer-o hented

Approximately fkl Ixr cent advising and counseling, changes in student attitudes has the largest numvr little m ore affluent and a Iittle of the men and 81 N r cent of particularly for frpshmen, and and opinions during their years describing themselves as more educated than qur the womèn who resm nded to a will help the University of undergraduate study at liberal, 58 per cent, followed students,'' he said. e estionnaire distributed to evaluate adm issions programs, Cornell. ''The University closely by the New York State '*The social background of Corpell freshmen last fall said according to R. Peter Jackson, shopld be able to respond to college of Industrial and engineering students is not they maintained an A+ to an A. director of student records and students more effectively if we Labor Relations (ILR) with 56 very different from those in average in high school. finance. know m ore about the students N r cent. li% ralwarts anymore. Children This com pares to 13 per cent Fifty-five per cent of the and their backgrounds when W omen in the various of college graduates are now of the meh and 22 per cent of freshm an class responded to they start their academic schools consistently describe . more likely to enter directly the women entering colleges the survey, which was Career. themselves as Iiberal at a into professional fields.'' he across the country who conducted by the University in Comm enting on the high higher percentage than the said. maintaisned hikh. school collaboration w ith the percentage of students men, except in the ILR School. Dickason also attributes avem ges at the same Ievel. Cooperative Institutional entqring Cornell with A+ to A- There, m ale respondents were some of the changes in the This is the first year that alI Research Program (CIRP) of high school averages, Jackson slightly more liberal than their background and political undergraduate divisions of the the Am erican Council on said, 'esome colleges enroll a female counterparts, 56 m r orientation of engineering University have participated in Education (ACE). higher m rcentage of their cent to 55 x r cent. studenys to the increase in the the eight-year-old program , ''W e ho> the study will students from private college The Hotel Schoolfreshmen num ber.of wom en entering the designed to collect information help us understand the social preparatory schools that grade were not only the most college. He described women's on the characteristics of and financial circumstances of diffeiently and m ay have m ore conservative group in the interest in engineering as freshm en and to determine the our entering classes at students outside of the A survey, but also the most .. s k yrock eting .'' effects of college on students. fornell,'' Jackson said. Also, range, but of the same caliber affluent. Approximately œ m r Applications for admissions At Cornell, the results of the he said, periodic follow- up' as Cornell students.'' cent of the respondents in this to the College of Engineering study will be used to s u r v e y s y i l l p r o v i d e The College of Arts and school estim ated their parental from women have almost strengthen program s of inform ation for evaluating Sciences had the highesi income as $20,(* or more per doubled this year over last - ., s percentage of freshm en in the year. This com pares with 46 from l27 to 232 applications - A range with 82 N r cent of its m r cent from the total group and applications from women 'r- I I 'r Q class in that category, followed surveyed who . estimate their have been up about 80 N r t-u l-.t-z u uz closely by the New York State parental income as being at cent ovqr the last four years. : . college of H um an Eçology that level. ''Apparently, high schools are Clrnell Reports, V@l. 8, No. 6, July, 1974 with 81 per cent. The least affluent group was telling gifted women . that Responding to a question of from the New York State engineering is an option,''

Publhhed 4îx tim es a peur in October, Norem ber, Februaw , m litical orientation, 48 N r College of Agriculture and Dickason said. Apdl, M* and Jul!/ jor alumni, parents of students and other cent of the Cornell freshmen Life Sciences with 42 per cent Ninety-two per cent of the ihendn of the t/nfrerdf/p by fàe Oiiice of Public Information. described themselves as estimating the $20,(* level of students whb responded to the Editohal Ojjice: 110 Dtw Hall, lthaca, N.Y. 14850. Editor, lio ral, 37 per cent as ''middle- income, followed by the survey described themselves as Randall E. Shew. M anaging Editor, Barvy strauss. Photo Editov, of-the-road.'- 11 N r cent College of Engineering with white ' or Caucasian. The Russell C. Jfum ïlfont conservative and the '43 G r cent. largest minority represented * remainder either far left or far Engineering students have with 4 lxr cen' t described Please send address changes to Alumni necori ofjice, 626. right. traditionally included a higb themselves as black. Negro or Thurston Aoe., lthaca, N.Y. 1485% prejerably >oe weeks ïn The School of Hotel N rcentage of first-generation Afro-American, followed by advance ofmoving. Administration was the most colfege- bound students, ' Orientals with 3 N r cent. conservative group of ac- rding to Donald G. James B. Garrett. assistant Second ct m% postage paid at lthaca resm ndents with 59 x r cent Dickmson, assistant dean at the director of Com mittee on , x.y, and at u dfjïona . ' mailing o//ce.. describing themselves as E n gi nee ri n g C o I I e ge . Sx cial Educational Projects Temiddle-of-the- road'' and 20 '*students in the College of (COSEP) admissions, said that N r cent as conservative. The Arts and Sciences, for example, the num beq of applicants Collçge of Artj :nd jsiences haye come froe families a (Continned ol êage ê- ) . . aj . . . . 1ulY, 1974 . Cornell Reporfs 1,. Fessenden-Raden œ tV M argin of Life, Suroïocl Is In B io. Sciences Post Difh'cult, Cornell Sociologiàt Finds June M. Fessenden- Raden has been named associate director Just im agine lhis being said at a cocktail party or for academic affairs of the Division of Biological Sciences at afternoon tea ) Cornell by President Dale R; Corson, according to an ''M y children don't ask for food if l haven'! sold announcement made today by Richard D. O'Brien, director of anything during the day, They don't bother me w ith the division. 'M am a, l'm hungry. M ama. l'm hungry.' Of course- Fessenden- Raden, an associate professor in the Section of when meal time comes they begin to come around Biochemistry M olecular and Cell Biology, replaces Robert S. and the jittle girl savs, 'Are we going to eat, Marshall, who left Cornell on July l to assume the presidency of V il 1R1 il ? ' h Rosary Hill College near Buffalo. , - . x o . 4 s ay. ''June's professionalism and humanitarianism commend her to ., ,vs/j.) 9ootr?. this position,'' O'Brien said of the appointment. '' '1 have no m oney todayq' '' Then Iater, 'she says to m e. 'M am a. if there's nothing today, then we're not going to eat.' Professor Egner G iven '' 'That's right.' '' 'Oh, well, then I'm not going to ask any m ore. ''They are good children. They accept it.'' A dm inistrative D uties These words of a ' Salvadoran mother, are Joan Roos Egner, associate She is handling social science hauntingfy present at an increasing oum ber of professor of education, has programs in the areas of society's cocktail and coffee hours Unspoken and been named acting assoeiate funding, project review and unheard they 1ie there in the pages of a book director of research at the State processing. created by the photographer. Cornell Capa, and the College of Agrieulture and Egner is using a grant from Cornell authorit: on population. J. M ayone Stycos. Life Sciences, and acting the Cornell Institute for The book is designed to fit in among !he picture associate director of the Occupational Education to album s and multi-colored art books that grace Agricultural Experim ent d e v e l o p a m o d e l o f coffee tables. Titled the ''M argin of Life.'' its stark Station, both at Cornell. oecupational choice whieh has black and w hite tones tell the story in pictures and She assumed her new included an investigation of words of life in underdeveloped countries. The position on July 1, with Prof. the factors that influence a specific focus of the volume is Honduras and Et Program M e ed W Stycos and the International Joseph F. Metz Jr., the high school student's choice of Savador. The work is the result of a collaboration Fund for Concerned Photography, Inc., headed by associate direetor, on leave. careers. between Cornell's lnternational Popufation Capa. published this spring by Grossm an Publisbers, the book Lacrosse, Track C d 1* t$* C C$O1Ms S in$ h7a.r5d0b aicnk -pap beorboakc fko r atnhde A couple of mankind's oldest sports it was in invitational and cham pionship varsities failed to qualify in the affluent - a kind of extension events Cornell shined. morning heats. The heavyweight course in . and example - lacrosse and track - had some new stars wearing the Cornell colors this Doupe, a 6-0, 230-pound freshman freshmen won, however, to keep 0f applied humanitiàs. spring and the teams of coaches Richie from Irvine, Calif., won the South Harvard from a clean sweep. More Often than not. while the carolina nelays with a m eet record toss Another setback came when Penn Salvadoran mother's words Iie Moran and Jack W arner achieved of 58-9. He lost rarely after that and defeated Cornell by a deck to win the unperceived on the coffee . national prominence. Crew, under first-year Coach Doug improved his distances consistently. He M adeira Cup. The Red won just about a freat deal of the cocktail hour Neil. fared well and Coach Jim was nam ed the outstanding m dorm er everything else but the varsitv race, btazz, at Ieast in academiak will be Fenner's golf team w sted a winning in the Nittany Lion Relays. won the however. and took the Iame s' W ray about the need for extendirtq, record also. The baseball team outdoor Heptagonals and IC4A titles M emorial. - extension and applving applied disapx inted Coach Ted Thoren and (he won the indoor IC4A also), and cornell had a zood day at tbe IRX in humanities and the need for a its follpwers. The only bright spot for reached his > ak at the USTFF meet in Syracuse, but -it took some gritty clearer definjtion of b0th. Coach Dan W ood's tennis team was W ichita. performances to do it. The. Red got Tbe Capa-sîycos book opens No. 1 player Eric Schieding. After flirting with the magic œ -foot third in overall scoring. third in the and closes with a quotation from Mike French and Jim Trenz. b0th distance for weeks, Doux put the shot varsity, second in the junior varsity and a slum dweller's petition in E6 playing their first season of varsity 61-8 % at the USTFF m eet to take first in the freshman, coached by Salvador: Iacrosse for the Big Red, ranked 1- 2 in seventh place. The l8-year-old Doua Findley Meislahn. ''1t'S not the ssums that are the nation in scoring as Cornell posted did it in world class competition, Poor showings in the Thursday heats marginal, an exœ llent 12-2 record. A scoring finishing behind Olympians Al forced thv Cornell varsity and It's the people. it's us... barrage and solid defense carried the Feurbach and George W oods. Doupe's freshman teams - among others - W e are on the margin of team to the NCAA semi-finals (where it put of 61-5% in the NCAA meet at into the xpeclzages on Friday. W indy heallh. lost to Maryland. 19- 10), a fifth Ivy Austin, Tex., got him sixth place. conditions blew out the Friday races The margin of education. G ague title and a fourth-place ranking Shields, a 6-2, 245-pound junior who and the varsity and frosh were forced Tbe margin of work. had never thrown the hammer until into early Saturday qualifiers. They W e crY to the four winds nationally. French, a sophomore from St. after his freshman year at Cornell, were successful, even though they had Tbat we don't want to be Davids, Ontario, scored 63 goals and gained All-America honors at the to rdw twice in one day. marginal...'. had 31 assists for 94 m ints. Trenz, a NCAA meet. His throw of 2* -4 was The golfers got off to a fast start, senior who transferred to Cornell from good enough for fourth place and All- swqeping their first five matches. They Cdj O j Penn State two years ago, was second Am erica recognition. His previous best ' were upset at Colgate, then lost to good with 91 m ints on 47 goals, 44 assists. was 189 feet. Shields' eoaehes feel he Harvard and Yale teams to finish 5-3. * ce g x Both set Cornell records for goals and has the potential to equal the feats of The Big Red baseball team lost 10 of assists and Trenz was nam ed All- Cornellian A1 Hall '56, a five-tim e 13 games on a trip to Texas during Robert N. Berube, '66, an America and the lvy League's first . Olym pian. spring vacation and never fully outstandfng basketball player '* Pl ayer of the year.'' Captain Bob Anastasio had an recoveted. The Texas trip seem ed to set for the Big Red during his As with any ehampionship team , a outstanding year, starting with being a pattern for Cornell with three of the undergraduate days, is director host of players gained recognition. In named the outstanding performer in losses coming by a single run. Before of the University's newly additidn to French and Trenz, the South Carolina Relays. At his best the season was out, Cornell suffered opened W estern Regional sophom ore m idfielder Bill M arino, in the 880, he set a Cornell record of four rrfore one- run losses, aII of them office at 3600 W ilshire junior defenseman Dave Devine and 1:49.2 at the NCAA meet. He also ran com ing in the final inning. The Red Boulevard, Suite 318, in 'Los senior goalie M ike Emm erich were on aIl the Big ned relay team s. finished with a 13- 19 record, missing a Angeles, Calif. named All-lvy. Marino finished third Teaming with Dane Keehn, Tom winning season for the first time in 10 opened this spring, the in scoring with 47 points. Trenz and Patterson and Pal Roach at the Nittany years. Cornell was 6-7 in the EIBL and office com pletes a network of seniorq Steve Sanford and Jay Lion Relays, Anastasio and his mates finished sixth. wvên regional offices across Gallagher played in the North- South ran the fastest two-m ile relay time in Thoren, who thought he'd have solid the country designed to All-star gam e. the riation to that point, 7:24.2. pitching and questionable hitting this provide direct assistance to Dave Doupe and carl Shields were The cornell crew swept the Goes season, found the reverse to be true. alum ni and other individuals the biggest names for the Cornell track Regatta, defeating Navy and Syracuse, Steve Hamrick his ace Iefthander, interested in the University team, with Doum winning the shot put and the varsity heavyweights took the finished among the national Ieaders in and its activities. Berube consistently a11 season and Shields carnegie Cup from Prinœ ton and Yale. strikeouts again (13.6 average), but had (pronouncxd BEAR-uh-bee) finishing brilliantly in the hammer Neil's Iirst disapm intment of the year a 3-4 record and a 2.81 earned run will be working with alum ni throw. Cornell's l-2 record in dual came a week later at the Easterns when average. As a junior, Hamrick had been groups centered in the ., .meet come tition is deceiving, .o cause , both the heavyweight and liglqweight 54 wilh a.0.95 EIlA.' southwest ând tàefàr West. 4 Corhell Reports

Some OId #J#:, som e netr ones.... H appiness and lnterest E ren ts atR eunionç, ! Happiness and interest were in abundance on tired, illiterate, sick, m the Cornell campus the weekend of June 13- l7, them will live in mud as some 1,9* alum ni and another 1,300 family soil, working for landlo mem bers participated heavily in the scheduled naked and hungry und activities. Even Sundayls Cornelliana night, and Africa and La scheduled on the last evening in the new format watching. hoping. The which ran through Sunday, turned out a good with whom we have in crowd. Ambassador Hollan 4 The weekend paid tribute to the Iate M orris increased know- how . Bishop ' 14, with a plaque dedicated to his longer dominated by tlft memory in Sage Chapel, and a reading of some areas but shared inter' of his works at Cornelliana night, by President industrial power centerl Emeritus Deane W . M alott. Japan, Russia and the 1.)1 One event that produced a turnaway erowd this, he said, he sees was the Saturday morning reunion forum. powers even the Unit: - A world with the power and the ways but spirit of the Marshall Pl not the will to deal effectively with the sickness help to the underdevel and hunger, the poverty and abject misery that of the world. faces most af mankind, was a vision evoked by He said he sees a the observations of à panel of distinguished dependence on intern Cornellians during the forum, on the topic United States and th ''The Shape of Things to Com e - the Next capability of being th Singing <* The Eoenïng Song....'' Twenty-five Years.'' entire world. - ' Speaking before an overflow crowd of some Black who declined ti 1,0œ alum ni in the Alice Statler Auditorium, issues of the present : were Sol M . Linowitz, Law '38, former this country alone, wh: ch4irman of the National Urban Coalition and will of setting aside # am bassador to the Organization of American national product, the 1 States; Jerome '' Brud'' Holland '39, former deprived could be provi United States Ambassador to Sweden; and Max ''AII that is lacking,'' Black, the Susan Linn Sage Professor of tl () it-'' and Humane Letters. The During the hour-an moderator was Austin H. Kiplinger '3Y, editor and Linowitz question and publisher. something was enoug i Stating that this is a time of unparalleled problem of making the d, affluence and unparalleled need. Linowitz self reliant. Linowitz ig: dram atized the m isery in store for most of the im mensity of the tt world's peoples by pointing out that every 60 underdeveloped count? seconds 1.200 human beings are going to be hand, he said, the knoi born on this earth. About 160 of them are going available. stating that to be eolored: black, brown, yellow and red. Of Strength for mankink these 200 hum an beings that are being born as I com m unicate.yy

stand here in the 60- second inverval, half are He concluded his tk, going to be dead before. they are a year old. Of Huxley who wrote l00 those that survive, another half are going to be the United States: '' '1 ' dead before they' are l6. Of these 200 kids that the slightest degree im are coming into the world at this m oment, 50 of and your material reso them are going to survive past their 16th grandeur, territory doej birthday and when you look at them and great issue about whit m ultiply by hundreds of thousands and overhanging fate is wh m illions; you see the human beings of this with all those things.' ' earth, during the next 25 years and thereafter; * *

and this is the way they are going to look. * Thefre going to have an age exmctancy of Also Saturday mornb A look ct some dculpfl:re,lphnax A> M-eum. about 30 years. . Thefre 'goipgzto % ' kungoi: za Jcornell' Aaetee. hnd:i Cornell Reports 5

saturday monningjorum tlf Alice statlerhuditorium.

ccoïly A ttended leir lives. Most of University Law School, told som e 250 women t tents, tilling the attending the W omen's Reunion Breakfast of tt of them will lie the need for economic independence for women. After a woman m arries hlYn skies of Asia qç ' , Younger said, nerica, waiting, the Iaw acts iu a sinister way> &by eategorizing ke human beings her as the legal dependent upon her husband, '' rhis earth. who is the provider. This Iegal role division is '' e sees a world of fine, Younger said, so long as everything goes 'uom ic power no smoothly.'' ed States in these 'ntly among such Citing several eourt cases. Younger showed com mon market, how the legal protection of women works in theory but not in practice itates. Along with , breaking down at the ehance of these ' point women try to ''cash in'' on their legal rights by translating them into hard cash. ln one 's. taking on the providing all-out instance, the court found ''the right of support tions and peoples ... amounts to exactly what the husband chooses to give her.'' In another, the law allows the : with increased husband to determ ine what ''necessaries'' he 9 trade with the m ust provide to his wife. Alimony is ''rather a iers having the gratuity'' from the court, Younger said. reservoir for the Summ ing up her point that under present Iaws the woman finds hersell deiined as The days oere renp busy, and som etimes gretth long.... osticatp, said the economieally dependent and the ''econom ically ident enough in lesser of the two partners in the marriage.'' n act of national In failing to give the dependent wife nt of the gross sufficient protection, the law ''is unfair'' and is d hungry and the '' grandest discrim ination'' practiced against wom en today. Furtherm ore, ''the legal image of , '-is the will to ourselves helps shape us,'' Younger added, shifting to personal anecdotes of her own *ssion Kiplinger expectations about getting married, haviùg er the will to do children and working. The result of these inger raised the conflicting models of what a wom an should be veloped peoples ''i S me ,'' Younger quipped, ''and I am a perfeet 'lk discussed the mess. l am always divided,'' eatering to her edu' cating the husband and two ehildren. tlf on the other for doing thts is Younger advocated a legal system which *% new pillar oj while ignoring sex as the determinant econom ic the ability to factor would encourage women to be financially independent; make it harder for women to guoting Thomas marry; provide tax incentives for working o after a visit to wives; recognize that one spouse may be say that l am in financially dependent but not allocate that role : by your bigness on the basis of sex; provide for real econom ic slzch. Size is not benefits to the dependent spouse and provide Rke a nation; the job counseling and training for the economic s the terror of' independence of the dependent spouse after You going to do dissolution of marriage. The non-legal model of the adult wom an, Younger said, should do what she wants to do. ''There is only one ihing I think she must be ... 1, youhger f , .54, economically sqlf-supporting'. This, I think, is ' ' o s yr,euse ! the key to independence.'' .' . . President Corxm dedicates M o- d Bishop plctpe ïyl' Sage cAapel.

- 6 Cornell Reports July, 1974 Com ell Dean O lin Lab Is D edicated Kahn H eai Pubhc Service Panel Economist Alfred E. Kahn, Kave been the main subject of until recently dean of the %is research for the past M College of Arts and Sciences, years. has begun a six- year term as An authority on American chairm an of the Nèw York industry and its regulation. S t a t e P u b l i e S e r v i c e Kahn joined the Cornell Commission (PSC). He was laculty in 1947. He was name appointed to the full- time post the Robert Julius Thorx in M ay by Governor M alcolm Professor of Econom ics in W ilson, effective July 1. 1967. Kahn, who com pleted a five- He has served on the U.S. year term as dean of the Arts attotney general's committe College on June 30,' is on leave to study the antitrust Iaws, of absence from the faculty in with the antitrust division ol order to serve in his new post. the Department of Justice, and He succe'eded Joseph Swidler, in the Department of who left his PSC chairmanship Commerce. to becom e director of the State He also was a m ember of the University's Institute for K nior staff of the President's Policy Alternatives. W hile Council of Economic Advisoo. Kphn, a Democrat, has been Al* dE. KIA. He served as consultant to the ap' pointed to serve as chairman U.S. Department of Justice in through Feb. 1, 1980, he serves water companies in the state. 1963- 64 and Federal Trade at ihe pleasure of the governor. Kahn said the position Comm ission in 1965, the The com mission governs the interests him because it will National Com mission on FoM rates and practices of give him an opportunity to M arketing in 1966, and the telephone, electric, gas and help develop the policies that Ford Foundation in 1967. He has testified many tim es before congressional committees and Freshm an Survey in regulatory proceedings ' (Continuedjrom Hge 2) before the Federal Power asking for consideration by N r cent. Comm ission. Kalln' is credited COSEP decreased by 2* for Almost none of the with devising the two-priœ admission to the Class of 1978. responding students said that system now used for regulating He said that one contributing they would tem porarily drop the field price of natural gas. UNJTKD - s- n- T.'œ n. Ca>- : 0 ... 4 lœ 1, s at t% factor to the decrease is out of the Univ'ersity. The Kahn received the bachelor dedication of the Sx ncer T. Olin Chemistry Laboratory Iast month. ln increased com petition for College of Arts and Sciences, and master of arts degrees accepting the building for the University, Chairman of the Board of Trustees Robert W . Purcell, said ''As the science of chemistry helps to minority students. e4M ore which has been experiencing a from New York ' University, unite the separate elements into compounds which are useful to sxiety, southern schools are o- ning downward trend in enrollm ent artd the doctor of philosophy so sm ncer T. Olin has united education and industry. and as he has their doors to minority due to drop-outs and transfers degree from Yale University in sewed Cornell so has be served his country, and, indeed, the world. W e students, and more students to statwtory units, is 1942. He also studied at the ... are pleased to participate with Sm ncer T. Olin in dedicating this aie choosing to begin their particularly interested in University of M issouri from facility to the advancement of chemistry and, through chemistry h i g h e r e d u c a t i o n a t projected dropout rates. 1937-38. research, the progress of mankind.'' comm unity colleges near their homes.'' Students in the College of Aqs and Sciences were most & ew Fehne Rex arch Lab Set U p at Vet College optimistic about their chances of ''makin'g'-'' at' least a B Trends in the last 10 years show that the animals. Now that people show an interest average #' at cornell. Fifty- cats have been giving the dogs a struggle in caring for them, he said -- and with eight . N r cent of tbe to m aintain their title as man's best friend. lpproximately 40 N r cent of small anim al respondents in the Arts. A Cornell veterinarian estimates the practice devoted to cats - - there is a College felt they could attain U.S. feline population at about 30 m illion, demand for better health care. He this level of x rformance, many of which are unfortunately suffering anticipates that research supm rt will followed by Architecture with from a variety of unstudied and as yet œ me primarily from concerned private 54 lxr cent. incurable diseases. lndividuals and foundations. Only 1,3 N r cent of the A new Feline Research Laboratory has The research facility team will include students suweyed said they been established at Cornell's #ew York dinicians from the Small Animal Clinic at would not continue their State Veterina'ry College, which will cornell. Mem bers of the basic research ed u ca t i o n be yo n d t he utilize Iaboratories, clinics, offices and laculty and the medical staff will work bachelor's degree level. Sixty- animal facilities in tfle main college together on new or unusual problem s as one per eent ol the students in building and the new M ultica' tegorical they appear in the clinic, Dr. Scott said. the Architecture School and 52 Research Building. Its three-fold purpose G her clinics and private practitioners per cent of the students in the is to (1) promote and conduct research on Kave also agreed to eooperate with the Engineering College said they diseases of the dom estic cat in order to new facility by sharing case . As would continue on for master's prevent or cure them ; (2) provide facts are gleaned from research, the degrees. continuing education on feline diseases to inform ation will be made available to An ' ovem helm ing 69 per veterinarians and cat owners, and (3) aid practicing veterinarians through cent of the respondents from veterinarians when new or unknown eontinuing education program s, the ILR School said they diseases occur. Funds from the Division of published papers in professional journals, planned to go' on to law school. Research Resources, National Institutes ol an annual report and x riodic sa cial Eleven per cent of the Hea1th, will provide equipment and cages laboratory reports. . students in agriculture said for the new laboratory anim al facility. 'TAII clinic case records are being they would pursue study to According to Dr. Fredric W . Scott, Y m puterized so that instant recall of all becom e doctors pr dentists and associate professor of veterinary a ses of a particular disease of the cat will nearly 25 lx r cent want to micr'obiology and director of the new unit. be possible.'' Dr. Seott said. becom' e veterinarians. Twenty- many feline diseases which will be studied **Furthermore, computerized researclt nine m r eent of the arts are com parable' to human ailments. He > .F-# w . - data can be subjected to detailed analyses students said they would seek stressed, however. that the goal of the and interpretations.'' education in medicine. laboratory staff is to study dijeases of thç explained. the only càt ailm ents T h e m u I t i d e p a r t m e n t a l , Students most interested in cat for the cat's direct benelit. investigated weœ those which had hum an m ultidisciplinary approach of fher working toward dodorates ''Until now,'' Dr. Scott said, e'the only counterparts, sueh as leukem ia, rabies and program is its strongest asset, according to. were from the College of Arts supm rt obtainable was for comparative ringworm . Dr. Scott. ''The availability (jf exa rtise and Sciences with 33 x r cent. studies, where cats were used as animal Dr. Scott said that feline research was from many departments within th# Thçy were lollowed by the mM els in Ysearch on hum an diseases.'' late in gaining supa rt because cats were Veterinary College is one of the reaso- En p'neering jtudents With 32 Y èause of this funding restriction. he ' late in gaininj. populatit# 'as aym- nion' 1' m w oei -ikuk a% utvs.-- - --., '* 1+ uidt 't , .k 1y , 1974 '' ; e corrjejj Reports 7 ' . ' j r s tt. $. r $.1 ï t d t rl. r # ,.,

. $'' (Continnedjrom Page 1) she will report for active duty . .y/' L' ')ytq.. ': lle ca l I ed ' ' be a u t i f u l at Pçase Air Force Base in New - - ' )#:.''' ; eand idates. w ho h a ve Ham pshire, where she expects , c . . : . ,. j ' ompleted the requirements to work in the area ()f ' )ïn , - . :'). . in cl udi n g t he ph ysi ca1 meteorlllogy. ,(ï , 'k' . (L ' - à' > : ' % ?@1F :ê és ' %' . ) I education requirement. i In reaetion to her long list of . :yu s .. .sy. .-' . . . : /.) Z -' * ' , At least four cham paglle firsts - first u'om an enrolled .j'*h. t $'*,y f' '. è , , ,j-kt'. ' à ' eorks i'lew through the air as in ilOT(ao, first to graduate and , Jvt.V ,. ,j) . . . tl'e students stood for the first wom an to be a x ' ;) ' . j. '., . eonferring of degrees. There Distinguished Air Force , ) . was also one frisbee hurled Graduate, Fieldsend observed: @'- ' . . f. , . aloft by an engi %kkà ' j? t neering It could have been anybody. tt. f , ' N bsiudent. and two or three it just happened to l)e me. .r.. , j' alloons. The candidates for In keeping with the Iaistoric th . ( e masters degree from the event, the principle address ., .1 ' . . School of Business and Publie was given by M ajor Barbara ' . ,. . Administration rose from .their Darden, eommander of the : ' z l . - . . - -..- , .. . 'v' ') ''.* .-V '.:*-' seats waving dollar bills in United States Air Force .z' . , ,t.jyy .. s y N- Nyy, (jh. jt r . ( . .. 3** . k . r- their hands prom pting Corson Recruiting Detachment l l0 ' ' y -- ' ' ' , . '.y to comm end Dean H $. - y; s ' . Justin M ajor Darden, who also . , - - ' D a.V idson on the eagerness of conferred the comm issionj *'VV,. ' '. -' Lis students to contribute to stressed in her talk to the new, , 'k'.E'rs'7t'771Y.k.- ' . the cornell Alum ni Fund. Officers their need to '* .,,d . *': r ' ' ' ' For the second consecutive comm unicate creatively and ppy xsx om z, w ar HA - talks with Frank , two m arried couples understandingly with the cliff josn James x > n .œ, a lteser for cornell in 1% and 1M . ord, director of alumni affairs, behind Schoellkopf in May joined -'the ancient and young people they soon will be baseball to Nicarag . W hen Deshon left Cornell, he introbduced universal com pany of leading. ua. He is 90 years old. sqholars'' together. Receiving Tbe lawn of The New York i tLheir doctoral degrees as Hospital- Cornell Medical Q . usband and wife were çenter was the setting May 29 U sherman Davie Hanna and for the graduation exercises of (Continuedfïom Page 1) experience includes service as of the Association of Ameriean suzanne Lindamood, and Iohn Cornell University . s M edical A candidate for a master ,.s a counselor aid ! qichard ahd Bonnie -lune College, School of Nursing e in the inner- Publishers, the Financial M , degree in Special Studies at city schools of W ashington. Executives Institute, and the eyer. - and Graduare school of c e o r g e w a s h i n g t o n sbe has % en a m ember of the Board of Directors of the u n i ve rsit y M a rs hal M edical Sciences. vniversity, w ashington, D.C., Alum ni Advisory Comm ittee' Connecticut Public Expediture Blanchard L. Rideout. Dr. David E, Rogers, M rs. conable is conducting an of t:e w omen's studies council professor of Romance studies, President of the Robert independent research projed Prograi at Cornell. culbe.rtson was with. IBM em' eritus . , read off the names F ood Johnson Foundation,, on the of W omen at Rec/ntly she acted as from 1951 until 1968 when he on the dx toral candidates g a v e t h i s y e a r ' s cornell University. eounselor assistant in tbe joined xerox as controller of with his traditionally flawless commencem ent address to the w ith a' longtime interest in continuing Education for the com pany's Business pronunciation. althouzh he graduating class. In addition did , students and the educational w omen Program at George PrY ucts Division. shortly make an er r'o-r in the Cornell University M edieal prlwess M rs. Conable has W ashington University and thereafter he was named vice As the Iast College Alum ni Association been ,e mployed as youth undertook grad alphabetical order. uate studies at president and manager of Rcandidate approached the dais. presented the 1974 Award of director of a church in Buffalo that institution before the finance for the Business Pideout said, ''And, M r. Distinction to Dr. charles and the Yw cA in Batavia. development of the program in Products G roup before residenty my son, Richard Gardner child 111, class of '34, Foqmer covernor Nelson which she is now enrolled P is Rideout.'' Father and --for his notable achievements aoekefeller appointed her as a Sh . assum i ng his present rancb d '' e has been a member of responsibilities in July 1972. son em race amid cheers and in surgery and education. member of the College the Cornell University council Two other new trustees have . Rpplause. President corson conferred council state University of Administrative Board since also been elected to the board keeping with cornell the degrees on the 21é xew yo, rk at Brockport , In . A 1971. has sewed as chairm an recently. traditiona corson was the only graduating students. of these , member of the American o f t h e M e m be rs h i p Robert S. Hatfield, chief com mencement speaker, and 94 received their M . D .'s) l(k3, Association of University Com mittee, and is now executive officer and president no honorary degrees were their B.s.'s in Nursing; and l5 , w omen, she was a member of council viee-ehairman. of continental can co., was Rwar de d .But the 3,3* degree their Ph.D's in M edical their New York state Status of she has been involved in elected as a new member-at- recipients were deprived of Sciences. w omen committee . Her alum ni aetivities in both areas. large to succeed Adele L. Rnotller cornell tradition, an > A m em ber of the cenesee Bogers, whose term expires aBllocution by Morris G. e 4-. Qf + county cornell Club and of and was named trustee ishop. the Kappa Alpha ta *t' 1 # the cornell w om en's clubs in emerita Professor of Rom ance The American wom an's history as subservient helpm ate has Buffalo and in Genesee professo. r ofN loarwm an d oPuetgnonienyg, Literature Emeritus, who died many of its roots in legislation passed in colonial times d , , concludes County, she is currently a Dean of the Faculty, was uring this academic year. M arylyn Salmon '74, in a lœ -page essay for which she won this director of the Cornell Club of elected to a five-year term as a D Earlier on com mencement year's M oses coit Tyler Essay com petition in history, worth W ashington. M rs. Conable has faculty trustee by the ay' , Thora A. Fieldsend made $5* . been co- kstory at cornell when she The essay makes an original contribution to the understanding W ashingtonc hmaiermetaing to f soltichiet sUunccievedrs iUtyr ie BFroancfuelntbyr. ennHere *as comm issiened a second of women in colonial America , li , according to M ary Beth Norton, alumni response to the p r o f e s so r of h u m a n eutenant in t h eunited states assutant professor of history and chairman of the com mittee that University's Long- Range development and fam ily &ir Force after being tbe first judged the essays in the competition. Planning Report (the cranch studies. woman to take military Salmon points out that life in 17th and 18th century America Report) and of the Alumni Hatfield is a member of the tuining (RoTc) as an was not particularly conducive to maintaining a strong family University conference at Cornell Class of 1937 and tlhdergraduate student there structure with the woman's exclusive role as wife and mother. Airlie House, Va. received the law degree in since the program began Tbis stress on the traditional patriarchal organization brought Culbertson is actively 1945 from Fordham Law Rearly 90 years ago from Europe was a result of the life in the wilderness , the' engaged in Cornell affairs. As School. He is a vice chairman she was am ong 40 cadets availability of land and the scarcity of .labor, according to one a member of the Advisory of the Administrative Board of tRkttd midshipm en to receive historian, she writes. council for the Graduate the Cornell University Council eir commissions during the In order to counter tltese stresses on the colonists' desire for a school of Business and Public and chairm an of the ttzditional early morning strong family slructure she writes that --within a decade of their Adminisfration (BâPA) Q , he U nivers ity' s Corporate o m m e n ce m e n t D a y founding all the colonies passed laws demanding obedience from recently completed a study of Development Program . Alm missioning cerem onies in children and established m nalties for contempt and abuse. For t h e S ch oo1 ' s f i n a n ce Penney's teaching and ice statler Auditorium . filial disobedienee ' in M assachusetts and Connecticut the cirriculum h . Culbertson is a research interests include eldsend. wllo is from - punishment was death... mem ber of the cornell certain sx cialized fields of udso n , M ass . , w as ''colonial lawmakers were, then, very concerned with University Council and the business 1aw and the law of Gq' ùmmissioned a second maintaining stable family relationships, and their rulings on the Cornell Club of Fairfield Selective Service. He has been tenant in the United states rights and liabilities of women renect tllis attitude. statutes were county,, conn. He also serves consult ant to various ! Forœ . A student in written not so much to establish a legal position for women as on the Advisory Council of governmental agencies and %. teorology, in the New York individuals, bui to place them firmly and without choice into a New Haven College in currently is co-director of a YM.1u ) e college of Agriculture strong familhl strueture. Society viewed women as extension's of Connecticut. projeet studying consumer Life Sciçnces at Corrwll, their husG nds and childon. The law did the sam e. 'x 4 l w ; j , & . t ! .. ! : '' Culo rtson is also a mem > r credit Iegislatiom j:t '# , . , . , . % .! . ? . .t ' 'u t.. . , ; . j , ., . . . , : . , . . . : . . )T) ':. q z .. . . . ' - . 8 Cornell Reports July, 1974

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The new Veterinary College Research Tower on the Cornell Cornell, a unit of the State University of New York under the campus was dedicated formally June 27 at the building's main administrative direction ol Cornell. entrance on Tower Road. According to Dr. George C. Popx nsiek, dean of the Previously referred to as the M ulticategorical Research Veterinary College, the new tower is one of the world's most Facility, or ë'M ultieaty'' the $10.5 million structure was designed advanced veterinary research facilities. by Uln'ch Franzen Associates of New York City and built by University President Dale R. Corson presided at the Stewart and N nnett, Inc. of Ithaca. The construction was ceremony, which also included remarks by Merton W . Ertell, funded totally by the State University Construction Fund. lts associate chancEllor for sx cial projects of the State University of features include 80 laboratories with 4 electron microscopes, 87 New York, Dr. Poppensiek and Dr. W .W . Arm istead, dean of the faculty and secretarial offices, 5 conference room s, 30 animal College of Veterinary M edicine at M ichigan State University rooms, 5 surgeries, 7 surgical support rooms. a lecture room and a and president of the Assoeiation of American Veterinary M edical cafeteria for the use of the New York State Veterinary College at Colleges. Inc.

C O R N ELL REPO RTS

In the July lssue:

Com m encem ent '74 . 1 .Nen) Aluntni Trustees ...... , ...... 1 Cornell-l.c. Exchange Plan ...... 1 Suroev ojFreshmenss Affïftlzl'c,ç ...... 2 Nlatuas Plcnrll-ng Head ...... - ...... 2

Saundeïs Facultv Dean ...... 2

(+ r P,>ge 4)