MONDAYIIl ,January 1, 1979 A supervisor for the state auditor's office made the claim that The University of Texas at Dallas should repay the state $1.2 million that he said was illegally diverted ;gum £ill for purposes not intended by the legislature. R. D. Luckey, Jr., said that UT-Dallas, in 1977, had illegally transferred to other accounts $1.1 million earmarked for faculty salaries and another $75,000 appropriated for lIIBMiButilities. The original claim was in a Luckey letter dated Nov­ ember 29, 1978. Luckey believed that the faculty salaries trans­ fer had been made to prevent the money from reverting to the state at the end of the fiscal year. There had been a misunderstanding about the portion of appropriations that come from local university funds. The state, local and general revenue funds are nct"broken out" in appropriations, "and that's what caused the problem," said Vice President Stewart C. Fallis, Business Affairs. REF: Dallas Mommg News, page Dl, "UTD may have to repay state $1.2 million," by George Kuempel, 12-19-78. TUESDA Y through SA TURDA Y, January 2-6, 1979 There had been wintry weather and poor driving conditions through the post-Christmas season, . /J,/L / and employees had been through Audio /JI!/??T7~ News to call their supervisors~ if roads were too hazardous. Icing was especially bad over New Year's. The informal graduation exercises were held in Hoblitzelle Hall, and Andrew R. Cecil Auditorium, on Saturday, January 6, although parking areas were heavily coated with ice. Graduates who REFS: AUDIO NEWS, TOn0800, 1-2-79. could not attend were invited to join \heliQRm AUDIO NEWS, TOR 0916, l-~-79. in the Spring Commencement program. AUDIO NEWS, TOR 0806, 1-4-'19-- IJ,.~~ AUDIO NEWS, TOR ~5-79. Degrees were conferred on a record 338 students~.,4u P/I? A-I.nv'r:! '7t17'2" f'.rtP , 1- (,. 79- 230 at bachelor's degree level, with 103 master7s . t degrees and five doctoral degrees. There were 106 more degrees granted than in the corres­ ponding ceremony of January, 1978. The new graduates pushed the alumni total to 2,398 since the 1969 opening to graduate students and the 1975 addition of juniors and seniors. /?/lG, REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0817879,'2-20-79 ,ADVANCE, Volume 15, No.3, February, 1979. TUESDAY, J 9 1i January 2, 1979 Karen Morin, doctoral student in Geosciences, " and a Carrollton resident, received a $250 scholarship award from the Dallas Desk and Derrick Club. P"EF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0697879~DH, 1-2-79. -893­

J MONDAY, January 8 through THURSDAY, January 11, 1979 ) ~,;"n.I'J/V The regular registration period was not delayed by weather, as conditions be~dsOlDewhat, ,d"..,.,~~ on Monday and Tuesday, January 8-9. Late~ ...... ,.., )' z" ./ registrdation. was held Jdanuary !j!JL. d ~!4, opene agam on Thurs ay, January1O~ II. Enrollment was reported in excess of 5,000. REFS: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.3, February, 1979 AUDIO NEWS, TOR0858, 1-10-79. A one-man show by Dallas artist Richard Childers opened, running through February 3, in the Visual Arts Gallery. Childers had designed the official banner for the dedication of the Dallas-Fort Worth Airpor~Am"'n-y fl')")"""~REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0707879/DH, 1-3-79. NoW Two more Geosciences graduate students won $300 grants-in-aid, from the Southwest Section, American Association of Petroleum Geologists. They were Leroy E. Mensch and Richard Houde. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0727879/DH, 1-5-79 MONDAY, January 8, 1979 and WEDNESDAY, January 10, 1979 Auditions were held for "Jesus Christ, Superstar," scheduled in University Theatre on Easter week-end and the following week-end. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0677879/DH, 12-20-78. TUESDAY, January 9,1979 More than 60 Continuing Education courses and ') programs were announced. The new Conference Center was to begin limited operations in January and be in full use by mid-February. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0747879/DH, 1-8-79. BROCHURE, XE300, Personal Enrichment Courses, Patti Driskell, 1-9-79. rt BROCHUREz,Seminars, Workshops and Short XE300urses for nusmess and Industry, Patti Driskell, 1-9-79. XE300;b BROCHURE"Financing Small Business, Patti , riskell, 1-26-79. BROCHURE, XE300, Real Estate Education I Program'l1-26-79. ! 1 I - \!a1 Driskell, t THURSDA Y, January 11, 1979 Jeri Yunker had come a long way since she cleaned her first patient's tooth. A dental hygenist for 12 years in Dallas, she was to take office as President of the American Dental Hygenists Association in October. She had chaired the ADHA committee on Governmental Relations, and had become concerned about the political aspects of her profession. First considering going to law 11 IJlj school, she instead had enrolled at The tt:tvl1 I University of Texas(ln1'Ofiticru Economy, to seek master's and doctoral degrees. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0757879/MG, 1-11-79. Russ Miller became editor of U·T·DATELINE. REF: U'T'DATELINE, Volume XII, No.1, circa 1-11-79. ) -894­

J ! SUNDAY, January 14, 1979 College IX (General Studies\students and families joined in a charter Ibus trip to see ) the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts showing of "Pompeii," at Fair Park. REF: U'T'DATELINE, Volume XII, No.3, 1-18-79. MONDAY, January 15, 1979 Daniel Rosenkrantz, State University of , Albany, opened a series of 14 lectures by leading computer scientists and mathematicians. The Distinguished Lecturer Series was sponsored by the Program in Mathematical Sciences, and arranged by George Kimeldorf. Rosenkrants also lectured on January 17, and the series continued as Jeffrey D. Ullman of Princeton University spoke on January 22 and 24; Michael J. Fischer of the University of /MG, Washington was the January 29 and 31 speaker. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0717879A.1-5-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.3, February, 1979. TUESDAY, January 16, 1979 G. Frederick (Ted) Shepherd, President of the Geological Information _ Library of Dallas (GILD), was named to the Technical Review Board of the United States Depart­ ment of Energy. The board was established ,to review development of a system for classi­ fication Mwl indexing of oil and gas reserve data. ~ REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0777879/MG, 1-16-79.

) THURSDAY, January 18, 1979 Nineteen pieces by 14 young British artists went on exhibit .. in the second level of McDermott Library. The exhibit was loaned by William J. Carey, former President of the Dallas Theater Center, before it was placed in his private collection. It ran through February 15 at The University of Texas at Dallas. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0687879/MG, 1-2-79. I Jerry Hirsch, evolutionary studies expert from r the University of Illinois, spoke on "Our. I Intellectual Watergate: Genetics, Race. IQ and ,.1" ~ Socio'libiology." His Wewl'Were a counter "'lUI/v viewpoint to those of Nobel Laureate William II. $h"e:.JI~ T JAil ik. lie., , who had S,JMkDalspoken at 5> UT-Dallas on September 12, 1978. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0737879/MG, 1-9-79.

cf.~CHRONOLOGY, "Has Intellectual Humanitarianism Gone Berserk," William B. Shockley, • 9-12-78. SATURDAY, January 20, 1979 /_ ~/JhrAY On a somewhat snowy morning, the

THURSDAY, January 25, 1979

British art~"MoiraKelly joined patron William ,t J. Carey in a gallery talk on the current exhibit t of works by young British artists, in McDermott ~ Library. REF,,: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0837879/MG, 1-22-79. cf., CHRONOLOGY, 1-18-79. Director Clifton S. Harris, Office of Teacher Education, was re-appointed as a member of the State Board of Examiners for Teacher Educa­ tion, to serve through 1980. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0857879/MG, 1-25-79. "International Business Prospects, 1977-1999" was published by Bobbs-Merrill Educational Publishing. This was the proceedings of the 1976-77 Key Issues Lecture Series, edited by Howard Van Zandt of UT-Dallas. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0867879/MG, 1-25-79. -896­ )

J THURSDAY,January 25, 1919 (CONT) Br["nt Ritter, who had starred _ as Tony ~ ) Esposito in University Theatre's production of "The Most Happy Fella" in 1977, had gone on to the title role in.the Dallas Repertory Com­ pany's production orshenandoah." The accomplished baritone, who had also been a soloist with the Dallas Symphony Orchestra and had a role in the Dallas Civic Opera perfonn­ ance of "MacBeth," was working full time as an apprentice plumber, in addition to his musical and stage activities. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0887879/DH, 1-25-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.3, February, 1979 Wayne M. Cowan, who had been "Mister Baseball" in Richardson for more than 25 years, was named head coach of The University of Texas at Dallas baseball club, replacing John Sommer. Sports Director Willie Davis announced both the coaching appointment and a 21-game baseball schedule, to open at Richland College R ' iil iialsmilll February 15, Coach Cowan had produced a third-place national winner in the American Amateur Baseball CongressHniy A,,, .e;-;--A,nt6nt REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128/SID010, Al Mitchell, e-tII~/4 1-23-79. hi. Al Mitchell continued as assistant coach and sports news writer in the second baseball season. Assoc. Prof. EdmunclGuttes, Biology, died following a heart attack. He haG joined the UT-DqJlas faculty in 1970, after teaching at Brown and LOY,JaUniversities. FRIDAY,January26,1979 He had also been a visiting professor in tne McArdle ) :Qean Carolyn Galerstein, School~ of General Studies, w' n Laboratory for C'ancer Research, the University was among eight new members elected to the .f• Wisconsin. Texas Committee for the Humanities. EFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0897879/DH, 1-26-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.3, February, 1979 Whether problems of newborn high-risk babies are significant in relation to their later develop­ Guttes was survived by his wife, Sophi~,son Edmund, ment was the research area of a five-year pro­ and daughter Margaret. gram .... funded by the Robert Wood Johnson REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0997879{MG, 2-6-79. Foundation; the study involved both staff members of _ Callier Center for Communication Disorders and The University of Texas Health Science Center at 1iiilIIIURDallas. I S~ Pediatrician Barbara Manroe of the UT-HM t faculty was named project head for the Callier outpatient study, while Opthalmologist Weldon Wright, head of Callier clinical services, was overseer of sensory perception evaluation in the high-risk babies entered in the program. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0907879/DH, 1-26-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.3, February, 1976. MONDA Y, January 29, 1976 1 Gerald N. Izenberg of Washington University, considered a major figure in studies of modern thought, spoke on "Romanticism and the Growth of Individualism" in Green Center. His address was sponsored by:ll the Student Steering Committ~,~raduate Program in REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0787879/MG, 1-17-79. Arts and Humanitles:-t.l ) -897­

J THURSDAY, February 1, 1979 ) James Vann of the University of Michigan was an Arts and Humanities speaker on the subject of "Social and Political Functions of Baroque Architecture." REF: AUDIO NEWS, TOR0804, 1-30-79.

ADV ANCE CIIIIiIIRcovered registration, the Callier Center for Communication Disorders program for high-risk newborns, and Brent Ritter's further progress onstage. In addition, the Carolyn Galerstein appointment , to the Texas Committee for the Humanit,es;--b the award of diplomas to 338 in January gradua­ tion ceremonies, and a summary of campus aids to handicapped students were featur~ The Lundell apartment gift of December was to be used to endow a professorship in Botany, President Bryce Jordan announced. ,J;;)istiugdfi!r Distinghished Lecturers in the Mathematical Sciences series were listed, with Leonard R. Haff, University of California at San Diego, leading off the February schedule, on February 5 and 7. Leslie Lamport, Stanford Research Institute Internationa,l, was to speak February 12 and 14; Andrew C. Yao, Stanford University, February 19 and 21, and Allan B. Borodin, University of Toronto, February 26 73"74 and 28. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.090A/MG, 2-1-79. '\. ') The December death of former Vice President Ralph N. Stohl was recorded. Also covered was the approval of The University of':Cl!lft Texas at Dallas chapter of the Inter­ national Association for Students of Economics and Management (AIESEC). Harvey Graff, History and Education, had completed an extension of his dissertation topic in a book, "The Literacy Myth: Literacy and Social Structure in the 19th Century City." Publication was scheduled for summer, by the , Academic Press. t Rainer Schulte, American Literature, received a $50,000 pilot grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities for an 18-month project, "The Art of Translation in the InterdiSCiplinary Curriculum: Re-Creative Dynamics in the Humanities." /

Alumna Jennifer Hilton, Anthro(p~logy,had delighted Theatre Three audiences as Erna Prindle in "The Runner Stumbles."

Billie Jordan, t'ij 1 _illCallier Center adult deaf teacher, scheduled "V.S. 79" as a Callier Theater of the Deaf performance February • 22-24 and 26. The vaudeville show was to be ) done by the "I Love You Sign Company." Neither sleet, snow, ice or illness had kept John Cannaday, Tony Borelli and Haskell ~ Owens from coming to work on every -898­ j THURSDAY, February 1, 1979 (CONT) _ ""nip,1~7r. schedule d day in Physical Plant" They were ) awarded plaques at a departmental dinner. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.3, February, 1979. TUESDAY, February 6, 1979 Some 5,200 students were registered for the Spring semester, said Registrar Roy Naugle in a news release. Undergraduate enrollment was 58 percent of the total. The enrollment .

'I WI¥f.tEl!!22 ,I'lllilli,'W"", ifW1t/lrm I WEDNESDAY, February 7, 1979 Weatherford College came to the tennis courts as UT-Dallas opened its fourth season with Bob IfMl Knight as coach. Nin'een matches were on the schedul)running throllgh April 17. Joe McAuliffe was the only senior man on the squad; Greig Mattison, Todd PiIIIlIII Mount and John Baker were juniors. Frankie Erwin and Sharon Granett were senior women, with Mary , Lynn Morrow, a junior, rounding out the seven­ member squad. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.SID0117879/AI Mitchell, t circa 2-5-79. THURSDAY, February 8,1979

An exhibit of works by faculty members and j' 2 ~11 students kI the Dallas County Community College rIj System opened in the Visual Arts Gallery. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0957879/DH,2-2-79.

J I SUNDAY, February 11,1979 It'. Memorial services were held for Edmund...Guttes, ) Biology, who had died January 26, in Jonsson Center Performance Hall. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0997879/MG, 2-6-79. ADVANCE, VoL 15, No.4, March 1979. An Edmund Guttes Memorial FUJwas opened to assist in education of his children. Memorial. commentaries were given by President Bryce Jordan, John Jagger, Biology, and Claud S. (Stan) Rupert, as well as by graduate Priscilla XE458, Holmans and student Sandra Graham. REF: MEMORIAL FOLDER/BIOGRAPHIESA 2=11-79; TUESDAY, February 13 through THURSDAY, February 15, 1979 Dallas Artist Nathan Jones returned to the campus with an exhibit and lecture on "The Development of Black Art Form," as Black Emphasis Week was observed. Students of the Mary Lois School of Dance per­ formed in a noon program February 14, in the Jonsson Center Lobby. Jazz vocalist Shirley McFatter was also featured in the Wednesday events. "A Panorama of Black Contributions" was pre­ sented Thursday,1!lzt' Ih February 15, by ... poet Marvin Milton. III Milton was account executive manager for "Mahogany" magazine. His readings were given in the fourth level "Pit," Green Center. The Black Student Union held ) receptions after each of the major events. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0947879/DH, 2-2-79. THURSDAY, February 15, 1979 Jaime Baldovini ran the second cross-country race (at three miles) in 18:17, with earlier two­ mile winner Don Bryan second in 18:54. Brian Yamell and Sharon Granett teamed to win 1'"// an in1Jllmurai mixed doubles rqeaetbQll tournament, /2f~"P~ with a 25-18 margin over Jim Robison and Judy / , JIll Allred in the final round. t UT-Dallas took an early lead as Mike Uremovich and Greg Mahoney, who divided pit~hir{;d;ti~~"~.#'f'e batted in a pair of runs, but Richlan~ ...-­ the baseball club on a bitterly cold opening day, 20-4. REF: NEWS RELEASE/to U'T'DATELINE, XE128.0147879, Al Mi tchelI,2-19-79. THURSDAY-FRIDAY, February 15-16, 1979 "Dallas Development: ftIiin Perspectives on People and Policies" was the topic of a .. seminar that brought Dean Elspeth Rostow, Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, The University of Texas at Austin, as keynote speaker. Director Peter House, Office of Tech­ nology ~ Impacts, Department of Energy. also addressed the opening evening session. ) -900­

J I rill·'~:t 'VIf FRIDA Y-SUNDA Y, February 16-18 and ) FRIDAY-SUNDAY, February 23-25 "You Can't Take It With You" was onstage in University Theatre, with Samuel Shipp as Grandpa of the wacky family; Anna Heins as Penny, mother and playwright, and Duard Edie as Mister DePinna. Patti Putnicki and Toni Roosth alternated as daughter Essie, budding ballerina. Essie's husband Ed, multi-talented xylophonist, printer and candy merchant, was played by Ken 1iiIIIa:I.Benton and Jack Portman. Angela Schnitzuis and Te~'played Alice, the only sane family member. .or: ~,,_ REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0967879/DH, 2-8-79. 0/11,c.eI'4. PROGRAM and POSTER, XE600, "You Can't Take It With You," 2-16-79. SATURDAY, February 17, 1979 Asst. Prof. Ajit B. Pai, Computer Science, 28, died following an automobile accident. Site of the accident was not recorded. Pai had joined the faculty at the start of the 1978-79 academic year, after completing doctoral studies at State University of New York, Stony Brook. He was survived by his wife, Varsha. Memorial services were held February 27 in IIIIIlJonsson Center Performance Hall. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.4, March, 1979 TUESDAY, February 20, 1979

Charles Hayden scored _, . J I 131 points as Physical Plant won 55-47 from Social Sciences in an intramural basketball playoff. Chemistry won from Geosciences 56-41, Staff won 58-26 from Biology, and Physic$took a 31-26 tiIIIIi!Iil decis60n from Environmental Sciences. Games were played at DeWitt Junior High School, in Carrollton. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE~D0157879'AI Mitchell, 2-26-79. THURSDAY, February 22, 1979 Graduate Student Don Bryan took his second cross country win, with a 26-minute flat time over four miles. 'I:hree others were close behind; ( David Kunkle, inC\26:09; Pete By throw at 26:11, aIIIIIiIInand C. T. Cadenhead at 26:24. Sharon Granett was abmen's winner in the mixed field, with a 28:17 time and a sixth-place finish. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.SID0157879, Al Mitchell, ... 2-26-79. 7'111/J . More alM;ri 600 persons heard AnthropologISt Richard Leakey in a Conference Center program that was carried into three auditoriums by closed circuit, large screen television. The 33-year-old scientist was most noted for his discovery of "Skull 1470," considered to be the earliest sugg­ estion of man's existence nearly 3 million years -# ago. ....rV'P/...... _~~a-.;'ln6U -901­ His lecture on if'@) G _ at MIl!Il" was co-spon­ sored by the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts and The ) University of Texas at Dallas. /­

J ! THURSDAY, February 22, 1979 (CONT) Leakey stressed importance of studying various ) species in his exploration and research, saying the relationship between predator and prey ..... j/lOt!7J ?/!.s"..>~z) e-.e-lunTJ( was important. "If we can estabfbish an overall t picture of what happened through time, it .t~ k6 L£t:lk:;e~z -zz'-79. C~~­ will give us a clearer picture of the of ,-n?g~L5J: III U m modem man," he said. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128. (not numbered)/MG, 2-1-79 ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.4, March, 1979 " SIdES FIeB. GENERAL SLIDE FILE: Color slide No. 14, 2-22-79. Perci Diaconis, member of Stanford University's MAILER/POSTCARD, "Exploring Human Origins," Statistics faculty, on leave from Bell Labora­ Dallas Museum of Fine Arts,,, circa February, 1979. tories, spoke on en 'h "ESP and Statistics" in a program sponsored by College I, Natural Sciences and Mathematics. "You can't always believe what you read," he said. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1017879/MG, 2-13-79.

Prisoners' attitudes shift dramatically during 1/ their incarceration, said Donald ~c,Sociolofy, ;r/;~ in a report of his study. During their terms, a ~ prisoners swung to more positive attitudes toward police and more negative attitudes toward lawyers, the report said. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1047879/MG, 2-12-79.

The I Love You Sign Company began itsP"~N~'m of "V. S. '79" at Callier Center for Communi­ cation Disorders. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1027879/MG, 2-14-79. cf., CHRONOLOGY, Thursday, February 8, 1979. CIHlCA THURSDAY, March 1, 1979 Tq.? , ? ESDA Y, February 27, 1979 ADV ANCE covered the Leakey lecture and the increased usage of the Geological Informa­ Eastfield College blanked UT-DaUas, 6-0, on the tennis tion Library of Dallas since its relocation at courts. One Energy Square. REF: Scoresheet, Sports and Recreation, 2-27-79. The Clark Memorial Lecturer was announced. Nobel Laureate Leon N. Cooper of Brown University, Thomas J. Watson Professor of Science, was scheduled on Wednesday, March t 28. His topic was "The Brain Viewed Through t the Eye: Theory Meets Experiment in the Central Nervous System." Students were requested to make nominations for "Teacher of the Year," in the AMOCO Founda­ tion Outstanding Teaching Award Program. Two center pages were devoted to articles on the School of Management, the first in a series o('six such coverages. The Robert C. Welch Foundation lecturer was also announced. Ray Pepinsky, IIiI!JtaProfessor of Physics at the universi~of Florida, was to speak Tuesday; March 7, on S' t 'fIR "Static Magnetic Effects in Mo ecular Bio ogy and Sensory Physiology." ) Physical Plant Director H. C. Lott __ had received certification from the American Institute of Plant Engineers. -902­ J CIRCA THURSDAY, March 1, 1979 (CONT)

Obituaries of Edmund W. Guttes and Ajit flirt B. Pai were pbl published. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.4, March, 1979. THURSDAY, March 1, 1979 Dan C. Williams of Dallas and Thos. H. Law of Forst Worth were f.lected chairman and vice­ chairman,. respetively, of The University of Texas System Boara of Regents. Williams had been appointed to the board by then-Gov. John Connally in 1969, and re-appointed in 1975 by then-Gov. Dolph Briscoe. He had also served on the Coordinating Board, Texas College and University Systems, 1968-1971, and on its predecessor, the Texas Commission on Higher Education. Williams had,Been a member of the Board of Directors, The Graduate Research Center of the Southwest and a member of the Advisory Council, The Association for If g' hji§ ? '\11 Graduate Education and Research (TAGER) of North Texas. . He had been a director and president of Southland Life Insurance Company. He was named Chairman of the Executive Committee in 1969, but later became Chairman ot'fthe Board, Southland Finan­ cial Corporation.

A Williams hobby was collection of classic and ~ antique automobiles, including two Duesenbergs. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.5, April, 1979 /h/f,;//Jd- /;).i::t:P/I& h'Pn:;r t?~/n:hA~/~ Three new regents were sworn in. The appoint­ 4/ ments, by then-Gov. Dolph Briscoe, were Jon P. Newton of Austin, James L. Powell of Fort McKavett, and Howard N. Richards of Beaumont. Replaced on the board were former Texas Gov. Allan Shivers, former Ambassador,Edward A. Clark and Dr. James E."Bauerle. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.5, April, 1979. ,f FRIDAY, March2, 1979

Geoffrey Marshall, Director of Education Programs, J)!£. National Endowment for the Humanities, ~t1 the Federal Government/Private Foundation Sem­ inar Series sponsored by the Office of Sponsored 'S Projects. RE~:NEWSLETTER, Office of Sponsored Projects, Special Ediition, 2-14-79. AUDIO NEWS, TOR0817, 2-26-79 .

... Lubbock Christian College took a 7-3 match from UT.Dallas in tennis, with Ron Wilkins and Ed Elkins winning two singles matches and teaming to take one of two doubles contests. REF: Scoresheet, Sports and Recreation, 3-2-79.

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J SUNDAY, March 4,1979

The UTD Civic Chorale, directed by Stewart J. Clark, IDH, was in concert, presenting works by des Pres, Handel, S" Brahms and Stevens. RE~:NEWS RELEASE XE128.1077879J\.. 2-26-79.

"cJ~~ '/M~s'/:':-.:f'~ ,.0% ,,/.3-4 - 7j1? MONDAY;March 5, 1979 The Peter V ollmers Jazz Orchestra played familiar jazz and Vollmers' compositions, with sponsorship of the Dallas Federation of Musicians Local 147. The 19-~ piece orchestra featured Ilidrl t n soloists Vollmers, on saxophone; Pete Brewer, saxo­ phone and flute; Hubert Knight, tenor saxophone; Chuck Willis, trumpet; Ken George, troIrli>bone; Jim London, French horn; Mack Ikllllgbim Dougherty, itar; Ed Smith, ~hone; Bill Spencer, piano; oel F'ulgfiam, drums, and Rusty Well, percussion. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1057879/DH, 2~22-79. TUESDAY, March 6, 1979 v.trl'llv' .PV//t' A ~1 of spring courses and programs lIIiiIiWIann­ ounced by the Center for Continuing Education, including "Investments for Greater Financial Yield;'and "Advanced Techniques of Investing in Common Stocks," REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.115'7R79/DH, 6-6-79.

The University of Texas at Dallas baseball club jumped '* off to a two-run lead, but eventually lost 12-2 at Dallas Baptist College. Second baseman Terry Beattie walked and catcher Mike Uremovich parked a long double in right field; a wild throw sent Uremovich home. Righthander Marty Long limited the powerful Indians to one infield single in two innings, but reliever Jerry Uremovich was mauled for five runs in the last of the fifth, including two homers. Veteran third baseman Gary Grant was knocked out of the game in the third, when a hard one­ hop ground ball struck him just below the right eye. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1197879/AI Mitchell, 3-8-79. If II 4B@iCSgT~l!'iW[Lff6, it f.t'addd t:'d/IC,,/4.Bff)J ff Rain and we grounds had leAlehed ~ baseball 1 games" Richland College, Mountain Vie~",--. r Bishop College, Prairie View A&M, and the University of Dallas lu I \12 ".gIu 1 Ii I1iimil ~ since February 24. REF: .aa. NEWS RELEASE XE128.SID01878791'" and personal recollections of Al Mitchell, 2-27-79 thru 3-8-79. WEDNESDAY, March 7,1979 '. Three hits, two stolen bases and two Northlake College errors bunched seven runs in the fifth inning as the UT-Dallas baseball club took its first win of the year, 8-6. Northlake had taken a lead in the third, but pitcher Mike Uremovich stayed.ik on the mound and was in no trouble after that except for Don Gary's solo home run in the eighth. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.SID0187879, 3-7-79. A"

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J THURSDAY, March 8, 1979

A juried student exhibit was opened, through "S March 29, in the Visual Arts Gallery. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1087879/DH, 2-26-79. - .. :c lIii • I Dean Gavin R. G. Hambly, School of ~ POSTER/MAILER, XE630, 3-8-79. Arts and Humanities, backgrounded problems that were still ahead in Iran, when he spoke on "Ayatollah Khomeini versus The Shah" in Jonsson Center. Hambly had served in 1961-63 in the Teheran office of the British Council, the cultural and educational wing of the British Foreign Office. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1137879/MG, 3-2-79. ~ CIRCA THURSDAY, March 8, 1979 Octavio Hinojosa had won from Larry Redlinger in the final round of the men's squash tournament; David Morgan placed third and David Craigie was fourth. In an eight-ball pool tournament, Russ Miller won from Jim Shields in "an"", excitiDg A match, in front of a crowd of spectJators." REF: INTRMURAL NEWS, undated, circa 3-8-79. FRIDAY, March 9,1979 "

A perm~.nentseries of lectures was established b:ir Th0 Univorsity f)f Texas at Dallas, honoring Distinguished Scholar.in-Residence Andrew R. Cecil, Chancellor of the Southwestern Legal Foundation. The first lectures were scheduled ..J/ ,$i!'I7",7 ~ for the 1979-80 academic year, andlentitled___ /FI~ the "Andrew R. Cecil Lectures on Morar Values in a Free Society. " REF/S:-- NEWS RELEASE XE128.1187879/MG, 3-9-79. ~ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.5, April, 1979

1 SATURDAY, March 10,1979

Soprano Martha Range was in recita1 the program f, featuring two baroque pieces VIIiIIfl.with trumpet accompaniment by Dick Waddell. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1067879/DH, 2-22-79. t PROGRAM, XE630, 3-10-79.

SUNDA Ym, March 11, 1979 Compositions by Robert Xavier Rodriguez and by UT-Dallas students were presented in Ml1l88J(;.,. a ..:s;;-?I'~d#...c-~ A ~ ...;1-,V /d~/c...c&...... 'rhe works were for voice, woodwinds, . guitar, strings, percussion and electronic instruments. l, James Gaskin, Karen Myer, Katherine Dougan, Edward Lorton, Paul Platko and Richard Merrick '$ were the student composers. RE~:NEWS RELEASE XE128.1097879/DH, 2-26-79. "o.ll2

This was the Spring Break period. REF: CATALO~XE102, The University of Texas at Dallas, 1978-80. -905­

J ,­ TUESDA Y, March 20 through THURSDAY, March 22, 1979 Aseminar series on "Women: Living ~ TodaYI Planning Tomorrow," was held by the College of Social Sciences. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1267S79/DH, 3-14·79

MONDAY,March 19, 1979 A collection of black-and-white photographs ;r~$/1/;IIIu,/7/')/In went on display through April 4 in the Special /' Collections gallery of McDermott Library. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1127879/DH, 3-2-79.

THURSDAY, March 22,1979

The plight and problems of abused children WItS aliIn were discussed in a team presentation by Dr. Margot Suelzer and Rick Reposa of the San Antonio Community Guidance Center. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1207879/MG, 3-8-79. THURSDA Y, March 22 through SATURD~Y, M.¥ch 24, 1171 A three-day Intercollegiate Music and Arts Festival featured voice faculty in recital on Saturday, March 24. Soprano Mary Ella Antahades, The University of Texas at Dallas; Susan Barrow, soprano, who taught both at UT-Dallas and Tarrant County Junior College, and Janette Williams, mezzo soprano, who was at UT-Dallas and Richland College, were the featured soloists. Dallas County Community College instrumentalists joined in the program, including Richland's Gene ., Cannon, pi'l,.on and harpsichord; Eastfield's Harry liP' "'- Phillips, clarinet; Brookhaven's Carole H. Irwin, trumpet, and Rebecca Scherschell, Tarrant . County harpist. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1147879/DH, 3-6-79. POSTER/MAILER, XE630, Intercollegiate Music and Arts Festival, 3-22-79.

If SUNDA Y, March 25, 2m 1979 /1

"Money as 1>.11Addiction" was the subject of lJmtuiIm Lecturer-Author Philip E: Slater, socicl psychologist, in a Green Center program. organized by James Moore. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1257879/MG, 3-13-79

MONDAY, U I March 26, 1979..,,/' \, A benefit concert, to provide scholarships for the Third Annual Summer String Workshop, brought ~ together Stephen Nielson, piano; Arkady Fomin, violin; Barbara Thiem, cello, and Matitiahu Braun, viola. All were teaching at UT-Dallas, Fomin and Braun coming from the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, where both held first chaiI:s. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1177879/DH, 3-8-79.

- j't1r1­ J I MOND7 A Y, March 26, 1979 A walk and two singI'C!soff starting righthander Marty Long cost The University of Texas at Dallas baseball club a one-run lead at Bishop College, and the Tigers went on to win 8-6. Southpaw· Bruce Bellamy was tagged for a double, in relief, to 'produce Bishop's final run. UT-Dallas' big inning was the fourth, when four runs scored on Bruce Lewin's single combined with a walk and asix Bishop errors. Bruce Mehlenbacher was left on after his double; he and Lewin got the only hits off Robbo Lloyd. UTD s J'ecord went to 1-3 for the season; 1 . REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128/SID0207879, Al Mitchell, 3-28-79.

I TUESDAY, March 27, 2979 Ray Pepinsky, University of Florida-Gainesville physics professor, gave u.. the annual Robert A. Welch Lecture; he spoke on "Static IIIIIItMag­ netic Field Effects... in Molecular Biology and Sensory Physiology." REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1227879/MG, 3-12-79. I WEDNESDAY, March 28,2979 Nobel Laureate Leon N. Cooper of Brown University was the Anson L. Clark Memorial Lecturer, speaking on "The Brain Viewed Through the Eye: Theory Meets Experiment in the Central Nervious System." Cooper was Thomas J. Watson, Jr., Professor of Science at Brown, and co-directot of the Center for Neural Studies. His Nobel award in physics was shared with James Bardeen and J. R. Schrieffer, and based on a microscopic, theory of superconductivity. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1217879/MG, 3-8-79...... ­ THURSDAY, March 29, 1979 Social historian Natalie Davis of Princeton Uni­ versity spoke on "Religious Symbolism and Urban Space: The Sacred and the Body Social in 19th Century Lyon," in a lecture sponsored by the College of Arts and Humanities. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1277879/DH, 3-14-79.

FRIDAY, March 30, 1979 \" In Austin, The University of Texas System Regents approved 1M'i IS zftbiltm seeking bids on the $2 ,Million Student Union. Bids were expected to be received and opened in about six weeks, with .-:zlEl•. Ut construction to begin soon t._ftplm thereafter on the 28,000 square foot building. -907­

-I FRIDAY, March 30, 1979 (OONT) Plans had been drawn by Fisher and Spillman of ) Dallas, in association ivith Haywood, Jordan, McCowan, Inc., of San Antonio. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1407879/MG, 3-30-79. 5(t'. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.6, May, 1979 The San Antonio Early MuQlSEnsemble was in concert at Jonsson Center Performance Hall, FOR' . II on instruments such as krummhorn, psalteries, Pan pipes, lap organs, gemshorn, shawm and rankett. REF: NEWS REL~ASE-" XE128.1307879/DH, 3-19-79. ~ Stephan Gartner of Texas A&M Uni­ versity spoke on If'?? "The Terminal Cretaceous Event: An Oceanic Solution for the Catastrophic Extinction." REF: U'T-DATELINE, Volume XII, No. 21, 3-29-79.

- -END CHRONOLOGY, JANUARY-MARCH, 1979­

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J I CIRCA MONDAY, April 2, 1979 ) ADV ANCE covered the elections of Dan C. Williams and Thos. H. Law to chairmanship and 1rice chairmanship of the Regents, plus the three-member change in appointments.

Also featured was the April 5-27 showing of black and white photographs by Lilo Raymond, in McDermott Library. The School of Arts and Humanities was covered in the series on academic units, with announcement of the staging of "Jesus Christ, Juperstar" April 13-15 and 20-22. The University of Texas at Dallas Translation Center, headed by Rainer Schulte, and the publication "Mundus Artium" were also featured.

Wolfgang Rindler had attended the Einstein Centennial Symposium at 6rinceton University, and had also traveled to West Berlin to chair the opening session of the -. European Einstein Centennial Symposium.

A photograph by Ken Biasco was selected to appear in the Photography as Art Exhibit of the Dallas Public Library. Patti Driskell, Continuing Education, was named on the ) planning committee for the 1979 Annual Texas Association of Community Service and Continuing Education, to be held in Houston in November.

An Award of Excellence had been received by the Development and University Relations staff, headed by Rick Geyer, for recruitment publications under the title" A Different Direction." In addition, Deborah Hays, ADVANCE editor and news writer, had received a first place award in the Texas Press Women Communications e

Contest for her series of news releases. ~

Betty Garrett, Admissions, had been one of 20 participants from the United States who worked in Hong Kong and the Philippines assisting government officials to prepare in­ depth reviews of educational systems. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.5, April, 1979

A'rP"'40'9v, /I,I),.,:;~,/97' Janet A. Walder, LivingstonCollege, Rutgers wi) University, spoke on "Aspects of Modem 9 Japanese Literature~with sponsorship of the College of Arts and Humanities. REF: U'T'DATELINE, Volume XII, No. 21, 3-2~79. -909­ )

", J MONDAY, April 2, 1979 (CONT) ) Andrew R. Cecil, Scholar-in-Residence, gave the Lambuth Lecture on the "American Economy and Basic Human Values." (As a note, this was not the inaugural of the series of lectures established March 9, 1979) REF: 10-Year Review, UTD Highlights/AI Mitchell, circa 7-20-82. Excerpts published in UTD MERCURY ~HMay,1981, Vo1.1,lfto.19,

8-24-81 and V~ume 2, No.1, i.ph J n 9-14-81. TUESDAY, April 3 and THURSDAY, April 5, 1979 cf. CHRONOLOGY, Friday, March 9,1979. A two-day seminar on "Minorities in the Real World of Business and Professional :Qf.velop­ ment" was held by the Office of Minority Student Advising. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1247879/MG, 3-13-79, ~P The New American Ragtime Ensemble, directed by Tom Maguire, was in concert on the campus mall, sponsored by the Student Government Association. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1397879/MG, 3-19-79, WEDNESDAY, April 4, 1979 Sylvia Darnell spoke on "Yoga" in the fourth level Green Pit, with sponsorship of the Women's Support Association. REF: U'T'DATELINE, Volume XII, No. 21, 3-39-79. ) THURSDAY, April 5, 1979 J.1 An exhibit of black-and-white works by German photographer Lilo Raymond was in the McDermott s ­ Library Gallery, through April 27. RE~:• NEWS RELEASE XE128.1287879/_ DH, 3-19-79. BROCHURE, XE630, "Lilo Raymond," 4-5-79. Senior art students also exhibited their works, through April 27, in the Visual Arts Gallery. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1337879/DH, Names of students were not published. 3-22-79.

POSTER, XE630, "Graduatlilg Senior Exhibition," f, 4-5-79.

~ Si u, \; . I)ItR'Mh FRIDAY, April 6, 1979

Thomas Gold, Director of the Center for Radio­ physics and Space Research at Cornell Universi returned to the campus (Spoke on "More About Earthquakes and Gas" in a noon lecture. Gold felt strongly that an unlimited supply of methane gas was trapped in the center of the earth, and that natural gas deposits reached by wells actually depended on the large source rather than the decomposition of organiE: matter. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1417879/MG, 4-2-79. ) -910­

J I SUNDAY, April 8, 1979

Brookhaven College won three games of a four­ game baseball series, with The University of Texas at Dallas finally taking a 9-0 victory in the Sunday doubleheader finale.

Southpaw Randy Brown eased through the final - z;; game on five hits, striking out seven... Beltamy's ~ce circus catch in right field cut off Brookhaven's biggest inning with two on the bases. UT-Dallas got 12 hits off John Vittuci; Bruce Mehlenbacher, plsying at second base, had three, while Brown and catcher Randy Talley got two each and rapped long triples. Mark Brookshier pitched a one-hitter in the Sunday opener, and the home team jumped on reliever Danny Hughes for six hits and five runs in the fifth, going on to win 7-l.

UTD had lost a 5-4 heartbreaker U;DIn Friday, when righthander Marty Long struck out 12 and allowed five hits. Two hits and an infield error cost UTD a 4-3 lead in the final inning. t'1f'/t( Brookhaven tagged Mike Uremovich for foUI runs ~ on one hit and five walk6in the ~ second'Friday game. The UTD season record went to 2-6 after the series. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0217879/Al Mitchell, circa 4-8-79.

MONDAY, April 9, 1979 Lincoln Christian College of Illinois won two games from the UTD baseball club at the Dallas Christian College field. Both victories were by identical 8-3 scores. Joe Hinojosa gave up three runs in the second and fourth innings of the opener, while the Preachers' Larry Morris cut down UTD on three hits. UT-Dallas took a 4-3 lead, batting around in the fourth , inning of the second game, but the Preachers turned t two hits off southpaw Bruce Bellamy into foUI runs. rwa' IIUI Third baseman Gary Grant, back in the lineup after an earlier injury, drove in two runs for UTD, and left fielder Terry Beattie got two hits. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0227879/Al Mitchell, circa 4-9-79.

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\, \ A duo piano concert featuring works by Gershwin, dello Joio, Schubert and Mozart was given by Judy. _1Owens of Plano and ( Jerry Kay Foote of Richardson, co-sponsored by the Richardson Music Teachers Association. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1357879/DH, 3-26-7~

J M:ONDAY-TUESDAY'~PriI9-10,1979 Einstein biographer Banesh Hoffman, retired . from City College of New York, spoke on "Albert Einstein: Gilmpses of the Man and G /"m,,41" t: His Science," in the Monday program. He ... was one of the five still-living Einstein collaborators in relativity studies in this, the centennial year of Einstein's birth. A leading opponent of multiple choice testing, Hoffman spoke on "The Tyranny of Testing" in the Tuesday program. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1427879/MG, 4-2-79. TUESDAY, April 10, 1979 French prints from the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts went on display, through April 25, in the Special Collections area of McDermott Library. The exhibit covered works from the Barbizon school, Impressionists, and post-impressionist works including color lithographs by Toulouse I ! I Lautrec. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1347879/DH, 3-26-n THURSDAY, April 12, 1979 Reviving the oral tradition of the troubador, Ric Masten and his wife, Billie Barbara, gave a program of "Speaking Poems and Some Songs" in Jonsson Center. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XEI28,1437879/DH, 4-6-7f POSTER ~,XE630,"Ric Masten from Big Sur," 4-12-79. FRIDAY, April 13 through SUNDAY, April 22, 1979 "Jesus Christ Superstar" was onstage in University Theatre, dramatizing the events in the final week of Christ's life, as seen through the eyes of Judas Iscariot. Michael Gillespie was director and Stewart J. Clark conducted the 16-piece ensemble Unique costume and set design. were made under direction of Virginia Linn and Richard David Holen, f, Gaylord Rohloff played Jesus; Kenneth Slaughter, Judas, and Renetta Blackmon, Mary Magdalene. ~ Stan Godek was Pontius Pilate, and Matt Porter had the role of Caiaphas, the high priest. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1367879/DH, 3=26­ P/'t"Ai'4'- PROGRAM, XE600, Jesus Christ Superstar, The productionA!oinclded with Holy Week. 4-13-79, Easter Sunday was April 15, POSTER/MAILER, XE630, Jesus Christ Super­ star, 4-13-79. TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY, April 10-11, 1979 \ A runoff was necessary in the Student Government V/,Z: elections for president, In..... between Steve Match... REFS: lJ'1'1"DATELINE, Volume XII, No. 23, and Susan Smoller. Smoller won, joining with junior 4-9-79. Debra Carlton, vice president for the term opening May 1. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.6, May, 1979. -912­

J ­ SATURDAY, April 14, 1979 MONDAY, April 16, 1979 Instrumental Ensembles, directed by The University of Texas at Dallas baseball club E. Harvey Jewell, were in concert. ) found batting power with 13 hits and a 10-8 win in the second game of a doubleheader against REF: PROGRAM, XE630, "UTD In­ Arlington Baptist College, at Randol Mill Park in strumental Ensembles," 4-16-79. Arlington.

UT-Dallas dropped the first game when, II ! Ci Randy Brown was touched for a double and"ingle to break a 4-4 tie in the lastr"'inning. UTD scored all four runs in the second. Gary Grant, Greg Mahoney and Billy Woolwine each got four hits in the two games. Woolwine's double drove in two runs in the seventh to give UTD its winning margin. Bruce Melhenbacher got three hits in the two games to drive in four runs. The season record went to 3-9, and the closing date. was set for Friday, April 20, at Dallas Christian College. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.SID0237879/AI Mitchell, circa 4-14-79. TUESDAY, April 17, 1979 Dudley Lynch, editor of "Dallas-Fort Worth Business Quarterly," spoke on "Scanning the Creative Nighttime Skies of the Mind," in a Green Center program. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1447879/DH, 4-6-79. Nobel Laureate Poly karp Kusch of UT-Dhllas Holder of the McDermott. System Chair, J ) voiced his concern about development of nuclear energy and the risks involved, indUl address in Founders North Auditorium. Kusch was a signer of a natinnal statement of concern on the nuclear energy issue; the statement had been drawn by a panel headed by Margaret Mead. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1467879/MG, 4-11-79. THURSDAY, April 19, 1979 The Center for Continuing Education, with the , United States Department of Commerce, held a , conference on "Patents, Copyrights, and Trade­ marks: Protecting Intellectual Property." REFS: NEWS RELEASE ~ XE128.1377879/MG, 3-26-79. BM8MM BROCHURE, XE300, "Patents, Copy­ rights and Trademarks," Patti Driskell, 4-19-79. ~Rn/ FRIDAY, M1lY20, 1979 The final games of the baseball season were canceled, at Dallas "'-iIIm Christian College, and UTD closed out 1\3 wins and 9 losses in II( Coach Wayne Cowan's first year. The team had a low season batting average of .217. Senior Marty Long was the most valuable player for UT-Dallas. Long played in all 12 games of ) the shortened season, at second and third bases and shortstop,., and was also the workhorse pitcher.

-913­ J ! --1 FRIDAY, April 20, 1979 (CONT) The 160-pound righthander had one win and two losses in five Plound appearances and 23 innings, striking out 28; the only mar on his record was 20 walks. Long allowed 20 hits and had a seven­ inning earned run average of 2.73. He also batted .214 and led in extra base hits with three doubles, scoring seven runs and batting in two.

Bruce Mehlenbacher, senior outfielder who also played at second base, got eight hits including .--::1 one double, and batted .242. REF: NEWS RELEASE II XE128.155/SID0247879/ Al Mitchell, circa 4-20-79. SUNDAY, April 22, 1979 MONDAY, April 23, 1979 The International Oil and Gas Educational A High School Vocal Performance Forum was Center of the Southwestern Legal Foundation brought to UT-Dallas, co-ordinated by Mary Ella and The Center for International Accounting Antahades. Development, The University of Texas at Dallas, opened a five-week intensive study program REF: PROGRAM, XE630, "High School Vocal Per­ in oil and gas financial management. formance Forum," 4-23-79. AIel4L {/cA?4C Tuition for the program was $2,000, 'iiIIiefl drew a world-wide attendance from major

petroleum companies and liP 1 'Al> governments. President B. J. George, Jr., of the Southwestern Legal Foundation and Adolf Enthoven,Director of the UTD Center for International Accounting Development, were co-chairman of the planning committee, which included members of leading international accounting firms. REFS: NEWS RELEASEXE128.1387879/MG, 3-30-79. BROCHURE/MAILER, }filI1.hu XE300, Advanced International Program in Oil and Gas Financial Management, 4iMfIMn 4-22-79. , TUESDAY, April 24, 1979 t "Let the Hands Play," a mixture of song and dance, mime and drama, including American sign language, was presented by ~ the Callier Center Theater of the Deaf, in Jonsson Center. REF.: U'T'DATELINE, Volume XII, No. 27, 4-23-79.

WEDNESDA Y, April 25, 1979

Graduate Dean Francis S. Johnson spoke on finding solutions to protecting the earth's ozone \ layer from hazards, reporting on work of the Committee on Impacts of Stratospheric Change, National Research Council. A member of the committee, Johnson participated in work that ~d,./i"r led to federal banning of nearly all aerosols (chlorofluorocarbons) in the United States.

Scientists had expressed caim concerns that gases from aerosol DI!!tmrelease might be rising into the stratosphere and depleting the ozone . -914­

j FRIDAY-SATURDAY, April 27-28, .. 1979 ) By "popular demand," the rock opera "Jesus Christ, Superstar" was presented for an additional week-end, with stagings at 6:30 p.m. an~:30 p.m. on Saturday. Cj REF..; NEWS RELEASE/PSA (No serial number)/DH, . 4-23-79. (Following this performance, the plexiglass props MONDAY, April 30, 1979~--- designed by Rick Holen and built by Holen, with - students Betty Maddox and Sarah Cummings, went Collegium Musicum, directed by Robert Xavier on display in McDermott Library's Special Collections.) Rodriguez, was in concert, featuring Mozart REF: U'T'DATELINE, Vol. XII, No. 29, 4-30-79. selections from "The Marriage of Figaro" and "The Magic Flute." Also featured were compositions of students James Gaskin, Ruth Anne Brown, Richard Merrick and Paul Platko. iif:~mwsRELEASE/PSA XE148/148A/DH, 4-18-79. POSTER/PROGRAM, XE630, "Spring Concert," UNDATED, April 1979 4-30-79. At a date not recorded, Astronaut Jim Lovell visited the History of Aviation Collection, with other Board of iIiIIn Directors members of International Learning Systems, Inc. REF: ADVANCE, Volume 15, No.6, May, 1979.

CIRCA ... ] 511 TUESDAY, May 1, 1979 ADVANCE led off with a feature story on Callier Center for Communication Disorders, centered on the announcement that May ) had been proclaimed as Better Speech and • Hearing Month, and reviewing the history of both the private antecedents and the present component of The University of Texas at Dallas.

1iIIIim Services, research, workshops and the Callier Center Theater of the Deaf were topics within the article. REFS: NEWS RELEASES~'S(No serial Dumbers)/DH, "Better Speech and Hearing Month," 4-16-79. /1/ Commencement ceremo~swere announced for Saturday, May 19, in the Richardson High r School Auditorium, with the Rev. Timothy S. ~ Healy, President of Georgetown University, as speaker.

David W. Craigie, Sociology, had been nominated for the $1,000 AMOCO Foundation Teaching Award, in March student voting.

Grant ., 'SOF III funding had been provided for 53 projects during the first half of the fiscal year, said John Rodman, Coordinator of Sponsored Projects, a 35 per cent increase. UTD had also increased its funding proposals from 73 to 91 during the first half of the .. fiscal year, and had pending applications for $6.4 million in first-year funding, with a ) pending total of $22.2 million. -916­

J CIRCA TUESDAY, May 1, 1979 (CONT) ) The School of General Studies was covered in a series on the various units of the university. Letting of bids for the Student Union was noted, as well as the elections of Susan Smoller and Debra Carlton in Student Government. /Vii:! k A benefit concert performance by'" Brents"Af Ritter, to help pay his way for ~twi'o-month voice program at the American Institute of Musical Studies in Austria, to be followed by auditions in European opera houses. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1477879/DH, 4-16-79. The benefit was scheduled for May ~ ;f In a news summary, Connie McLendon, College Relations Coordinator, had been invited to chair a session of the Institutional Researchers 19th Annual Forum, May 13-17, in San Diego. Vicki Bullock, Interlibrary •Loan Librarian, was named Employee of the Month.

Diane S. Bagot, doctoral candidate in Business and Public Policy, won a $2,000 Richard D. Irwin Foundation Fellowship for 1979-80. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.6. May,1979. Cyrus Longworth Lundell. Director of the Plant Sciences Laboratory and Professor ) Emeritus of 1II[an Botany and Environmental :3 Sciences, _ completed Issue No. r, volume J 6, of "Wrightia." The international journal originated in 1945, and wasNublished by --/lrs:J"" Southern Methodist Universl y. During Q*n the time Lundell was Director and chief scientist at Texas Research Foundation, the ~ journal was published at that site. Lundell came to The University of Texas at Dallas in 1972, when the foundation was dissolved and its lands divided between UT -Dallas and Texas A&M University. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1547879/MG, 5-1-79. f cf., CHRONOLOGY. August 25, 1972. t "Wrightia" thus became the first international journal to be published at UT-Dallas.

FRIDAY, May 4, 1979 Brent Ritter was in benefit recital, presenting 5 selections from opers and Schumann's UDichterliebe." RE~:NEWS RELEASE XE128.1477879/DH. 4-16-79. I!imt cf., CHRONOLOGY.,.., 5-1-79.

'~/?a... SUNDAY, May 6, 1979 ~ /~~ ¥'3t? 'i!!fr1A1' e'ttt! r,

j THURSDAY-SATURDAY' May 10-12 and ) MONDAY-WEDNESDAY, May 14-16, 1979 John Wustman, who had been accompanist for the Robert Shaw Chorale and Ii 2 iLlil conductor of master classes at Meadowbrook and Juilliard Schools of Music, among many musical achievements, directed a lieder master class at The University of Texas at Dallas. Singers were chosen by audition. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1537879/DH, 4-27-79. CIRCA M.Min THURSDAY, May 10, 1979

A mixed media e~hibitof scenes from the Yucatan Peninsula was ~ open.. in McDermott Library, running through June 3. The works were by Mary Berry of McKinney and Thelma B. Park of Fort Worth. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1627879/MG, 5-10-79. TUESDAY-THURSDAY, May 15-17, 1979 Paul Monaco, Director of Graduate Studies in Humanities, was one of two Americans invited to speak at a West German inter­ national film conference. In sessions held at Bielefeld University, he spoke on "Film and NflI , hBn Nationalbewusstsein in Deutschland, Frankreich and Russland, 1918-1940." REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1617879/MG, 5-7-79. THURSDAY, May 17, 1979 ) Martin Katzman, Head of the Program in Political Economy, had co-ordinated a study on Texas cities and the distribution of federal funding. The study indicated that funds should be disbursed to neigh­ borhoods or individuals rather than by lump sum to cities. The paper was to be used jJ~rby President~Carter's office in preparing the 1980 federal Urban Growth Report. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1657879/MG, 5-17-79.

I SATURDAY, May 19,1979 I t The Rev. Timothy Healy, President of Georgetown University, told 444 graduates~ his hope that they would "leave this republic stronger, richer and more beautiful than it was given you.

TUESDAY, May 22,1979

Writers and translators were the faculty for a ~ I. h'tM special program in creative writing, tI'MUHft.9ost" b"nl1$ 'If .I and comparative literature, running through August 16. Rainer Schulte, fo~ingdirector of the Center for Creative Writing and Translation, headed the program; authors and faculty members in Arts and HumanitCes who shared in the team teaching were Ronald Tobias, Creative Writing, and Denniz Kratz, Classics and Comparative Literature. They were joined by Thomas Hoeksma, ..... English and Comparative Literature, New .:5 Mexico State University. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1577879/MG, 5-3-79 . .. WEDNESDAY, May 23, 1979 Courses for adults, teens and children, including ground school training for private pilots, were announced for the summer by the Center for ) Continuing Education. Gilbert Peters, commercial pilot with a flight instructor rating, taught the ground school courses j he had come to the campus as President of The Association 111 for Graduate .5 Education and Research of North Texas (TAGER). RE~:NEWS RELEASE XE128.1667879/MG, 5-23-79. BROCHURE/MAILER, XE300, "The 1979 Summer Program in Creative Writing, Translation and Contemp­ orary Literature," 5-15-79. BROCHURE/MAILER, XE300, "Personal Enrich­ ment Courses, Summer, 1979," Patti Driskell, 5-29-79. BROCHURE/MAILER, XE300, "Seminars, Work­ , shops and Short Courses for Business and Industry," l Patti Driskell, 5-29-79. Amelia A. Lundell was recpient of the Louise Perry award given annually by the Dallas Garden Club, Wife of Cyrus Longworth Lundell, Director of the Plant Sciences Laboratory, Mrs. Lundell had been a club member for 23 years; she helped to compile and edit the club's filanting manual. She also served as Ui&iUhlflkLMLiiJiidbl library chairwoman for the Louise B. Belsterling Foundation, and was instrumental in making additional selections for the Belsterling Botanical Library, located in McDerm­ ott Library. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1677879/MG, 5-23-79. 'I ) -91lf­

J THURSDAY, May 24, 1979

) Summer session classes opened, running through July 2 in the first term, and from July 6 to Aug­ ust 16 in the second term. REF: AUDIO NEWS TOR0755, 5-21-79. FRIDAY, May 25, 1979

Paul Gaddis was named Dean of The UniVErsity of Texas at Dallas' School of Management and Ad­ ministration. Coming from the University of he Pennsylvania, had been senior vice president for " management md finance and ~ Professor of Management and Multinational Enterprise in the university's Wharton School of Business.

Dean Gaddis had also been in managerial and executive positions with Westinghouse Electric CorporationT; an honors graduate of the United States Naval Academy, he had earned Master of Science degrees at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and ~ Massachusetts Institute of Technolofy, where he had been a Sloan Fellow. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1707879/MG, 5-25-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.7, June, 1979. A photogravure of Alfred Stieglitz' "The Steerage" was given to UT-Dallas by Dallas photographer Ben Breard. "The Steerage" was first published in 1907, and the original photograph was made on a ship bails: am sailing to France. The ) original achieved a record price for 20th Century photogravure when it was sold at a Sotheby Perke Bernet auction in New York City.

Breard was serving as a member of the Advisory Board for programs in photography at UT-Dallas. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1697879/MG, 5-25-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.7, June, 1979.

--END CHRONOLOGY, SPRING SEMESTER, APRIL-MA Y, 1979

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J ! FRIDAY, June 1, 1979 ) Kugler-Morris, Inc., of Dallas was awarded a -. $2,321,000 contract to build the Student Union at The University of Texas at Dallas, as a.. Regents met in Austin. The two-story structure, encompassing 28,800 square feet, was to be completed in about 18 months, with work scheduled to start in June.

Fisher & Spillman were project architects. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.8, July, 1979 CIRCA FRIDAY, June 1, 1979 The June issue. of ADVANCE, last to be edited by Deborah Hays, covered the May 19 graduation ceremonies; the appointment of Paul Gaddis as Dean of the School of Manage­ ment and Administration, and the gift of Alfred Stieglitz' rare photogravure, "The Steerage. " Also featured was the School of Human Development, in the series on UT-Dallas' academic units. In news SideLights, Paul Monaco's presentations . in Germany were mentioned; James Dodson had been elected Vice Chairman/Chairman­ Elect of the College and University Libraries Division of the Texas Library Association. ) Carolyn Martindale, head of the maps and government documents section, was named Employee of the ~ Month. An exhibition of personal mementoes, by Howard Van Zandt, was announced for June 12-18, in conjunction with the 16th Japan­ United States Businessmen's Conference in Dallas.

UT-Dallas was to join with the Dallas Chamber Opera Society in programs of June 8 and ,

June 10. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.7, June, 1979 ~ MONDAY, June 4, 1979

Roland H. (Buddy) Adams, Jr., was named ~ Assistant Director to Millicent Green, in the News and Information service. Deborah Hays went to Chicago, as her husband was transferred there by his company. Adams also became editor of ADVANCE. An honor graduate of The University of J:­ Texas at Austin in 1975, he was a member ,7 Kappa Tau Alpha, scholastic honorary society for journalism students, and Sigma Delta Chi, the society of professional journalists. ) He left the editorship of the Mesquite Daily News to come to UT-Dallas, after starting his career at the Williamson County Sun in

-921­

J I MONDAY, June 4, 1979 (CONT) ) Georgetown. He ~t'"came to the central newsroom of the News-Texans, Inc., in Farmers Branch, later was city editor of the Arlington Daily News, and then was editor ...... e of the Mesquite daily. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1777879/MG, 6-4-79. MONDAY, June 4, 1979 ~ through FRIDAY, June 22, 1979 Student musicians from junior high schools, high schools and colleges joined in the Third Annual Summer String Workshop. Conducting the classes were Arkady Fomin, Dallas Symphony Orchestra violinist; Lev Aranson, cellist and professor emeritus, Baylor University; GhRritTiemzer, a•• ssdbe t/lnSji.;fn,.. associate conductor of toe DS ; Michael Lefkowitz, violiniElt with the Los Angeles Philharmonic; .. StewartlQlark, music _ tJ.. theory, and Robert Xavier RodrIguez, C/.. resident composer at UT-Dallas; and Matitlahu Braun, Dallas Symphony Orchestra violinist. Dorothy DeLay, violinist on the faculty of the Julliard School of Music, was invited for a special two-day workshop, and was to be joined by Julliard students in a recital. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1497879/DH, 4-19-79. ) , ..une-4 Wishful Thinkers were winners in the UTD Mixed ~ Handicap Bowling League as the 146-game season ended. Moreen and Wayne Higgs and Therese and Paul Reittinger were members of the champions. Paul Reittinger led men's series scoring with a 616 scratch series and a 694 handicap high. Bob Armstrong of the Up Your Alley' team 1 had highest men's single game with handicap j at 262, and also won the American Bowling Cnogress award for "Most Improved Bowler." Edie Van Cleve had the highest women's series with handicap at 663, on the same team. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1797879/Al Mitchell, 6-4-79. \"iI_UM WEDNESDAY, June 6, 1979

Wes;tern Electric Company's Mesquite plant honored an employee, Dennis E. Hughes, by a $500 gift.inhJs name, to the Graduate Prograni iri Environmental Sciences.Hughes ..' .' ,,: w~,a..g,r~?~"f.tlEnvironmen~l.·~a~~Mn .. f] f WSeten\&;. and was also responSIble ) [£It .8:4'ppl1~tiol1:spn~qIandoqcupational Safety at 'the .pJ.tttit.' •• REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1827879/BA (first ,release by ROlan~~BUddY)Adams), 6-6-79.

-922­ J FRIDAY, June 8 and SUNDAY, June 10, 1979 ) The Dallas Chamber Opera Society jOined~ with The University of Texas at Dallas to Stravinsky's "Mavra" and Monteverdi's "Combattimento." Robert Xavier :.n Rod­ riguez was musical dBIm director, with st;e direction by Michael Gillespie.~t' REFS: AUDIO NEWS, TOR0754, 6-1-79. Program, XE630, "Dallas Chamber Opera Snim Society," 6-8-79. TUESDAY, June 12, 1979 An exhibit of Howard F. Van Zandt's personal mementoes went on display through July 18 in the Special Collections Gallery, McDermott Library. The exhibit covered United States-Japan trade relations, and was offered in connection with a Japan-United States Businessmen's Conference, held in Dallas June 13 through 15. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1687879/MG, 5-28-79. WEDNESDAY, June 13, 1979 Additional on-line information service, to cover Arts and Humanities events including plays and concerts, was begun by the Season of the Arts office, tIPthe number 690-2983. u.s//1~ This recorded service was in addition to A (/ Audio News, which continued to carry basic events information. (As a note, the "arts

,I'~""",,,,,line" was later abandoned; a difficulty was a,l ~ I in maintaining up-to-date information.... -p;;AW!";4a1Sa Arts and Humanities information was $' -Icarned on the "Box Office" line, 690-2982.) REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1847879/BA, 6-13-79. ~

Four violin and cello students from the' ~~P/t? ,v,.N~?'l";(Z t07.t:t ~-l'ijr~ Summer String Workshop were in recital with Aov.,pAle::-e; Viti/. /S:; ,;(/QI• .r. ../~.y~<'97? Arkady Fomin, ~ Dallas Symphony Orch­ estra violinist, and Mischa Lefkowitz, Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra. f The r...-.:n recital was first ~ of f~ ~ workshop events. Friday, June 15, brfUght the Interlachen Art Academy String Quartet to perform with students. The,!orksh2R--/7~,A C' 1 Chamber Orchestra ~ on /'" 7 ~<­ Wednesday, June 20. Meantime, on Monday, June 18, Julliard School of Music students

who were st.1 1 studying with Dorothy DeLay presented a recital. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1857879/BA, 6-11-69. THURSDAY, June 14, 1979

Martin Katzman, 17 5 n Head of the Political Economy program, said that solar L­ energy ~ could ~ the most common 0 ~~ and least ~ expensive method of powering "­ ) irrigation pumps in west Texas and similar liiIKl arid lands. Katzman had been involved in a year-long test of such a system on 80 acres S" located near Lincoln, Nebraska, and was . t REF' NEWS RELEASE XE128.1817879/BA, 6-14-79. . lysis of the proJec . 'I":. .4,,"A reporting on his economIC ana .118111 -923- //Ol"d-))('l;;.;/ viti/. /~AI",. ~"7dSt;- /'?7"p. J FRIDAY, June 15, ltiJD 1979 ) The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation chose The University of Texas at Dallas as host institution for a graduate teaching fellowship program. Three graduates, two from The University of Texas at Austin and one from Southern Methodist University, received fellowships to complete Master of Arts in Teaching degrees and to serve for a year in a secondary school. Marie Cole and James Patrick McInerny were the UT-Austin graduates, and Brian MacLeod was from Southern Methodist. The three were to complete graduate courses in summer sessions, spending the 1979-80 school year in the teaching practicum. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1867879{BA, 6-15-79.

WEDNESDAY, June 27, 1979 A demonstration of lacrosse techniques was held on the UT-Dallas soccer fields, with Russ Bowling of the Dallas-Fort Worth Lacrosse Council conducting the program. The event included a scrimmage match between volunteer players from Richland College and UT-Dallas. REF: NEWS RELEASE XEI28.1897879{BA, 6-21-79. ) MONDAY, June 25,1979 Robert Winslow had become editor of U·T·DATELINE. REF: U'T'DATELINE, Volume XIII, No.5, 6-25-79. CIRCA MONDAY, July 2, 1979 /fl. Roland (Buddy) Adams edited ADVANCE for the'first time. The issue featured the ph j start of work on the Student Union, and the scheduled July 24 opening of an art exhibit by Jerry Bywaters. f,

The School of Natural Sciences and Mathe­ ~ matics was covered in the series on major units of UT-Dallas. Also covered were the Fourth Annual Public" Utilities Conference, July 18-20, and the tIIm String Workshop summer program. In "Side Lights," President Bryce Jordan and Janet Harris, Director of Continuing Education, had been elected to the Dallas Chamber of Commerce; President Jordan to a three-year term on the Board of Directors, and :r:t.bi&dimDirector Harris to the 25-member Small Business Committee. J/''' Joe G. Moore,,,Head of Environmental .//:. ) Sciences Graduate Program, was serving as REF: ORAL HISTORY, Joe G. Moore,.:"Work at a temporary administrative assistant to Detroit on Lake Waste Cleanup," 10-28-79. Mayor Coleman Young of Detroit, with responsibility for upgrading the city's sewage treatment plant. -924­

J I CIRCA MONDAY, July 2,1979 (CONT) ) Patti Driskell, Facilities and Services Coordinator f LIc I Center for Continuing :Education, was elected to • the la-member Board of Directors of the Texas Association for Community Service and Continuing Education, to serve in a 1979-81 term. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1917879/BA, 6-25-79. GENERAL REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.8, July, 1979. WEDNESDAY, July 4, 1979 Independence Day was observed at The University of Texas at Dallas. REF: I [S, TOR0725, 6-29-79. awl' ." AUDIO NEWS, TUESDAY, July 10, 1979 Six weeks of "summer camp" in downtown Dallas offered an opportunity for 15 young­ sters to overcome the emotional and psycho­ logical stigma of cleft palate. The program was held at Callier Center for Communication Disorders, and funded by a $12,000 grant from the Junior s· League of Dallas. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1967879/MG, 7-10-79. I'l THURSDAY, July 12, 1979 '+l/t/A-N'r&; 1/0/ /.&; ~ ~ hP"~t'.At77t?: ilNew Dimensions" was the first symphony ) concert in the United States designed for the adult handicapped (especially for the adult deaf). Held in the Great Hall of the Dallas Apparel Mart, the concert combined music of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra, with Christian Tiemeyer conducting, and a group of six artists ~rformingin sign-mime, an ilarm dalllini"combination of sign language, mime and gestures, to interpret the music. Billie Jordan was producer-director ofthe Ii sign-mime presentation. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.194787~/BA,7-3-79. f

Soprano Irene Gubrud sang with _ the ~ orchestra. The program was sponsored by -':arget Stores and the Bessie A~yeFounda­ tIOn. REF: POSTER/TICKET ORDER XE630, circa 7-12·79. Callier Center Theatre of the Deaf also an­ nounced forthcoming productions of ilUnder the Yum Yum Tree," July 26-29, and "The Mousetrap," September 27-30. REF: NEWS RELEASE/PSA XE128.194A7879/BA. 7-5-79. SUNDAY, July 15, 1979

For the second time in eight months, a faculty 'tU71/?E/1;/. /.s-A/~ v: /h!.rfu.9'- /97?, member of The University of Texas at Dallas " " ' Y' I ) was named a Fellow of the Explorers Club. REy; Cyrus"- Longworth Lundell was chosen on : NEWS RELEASE XE128.2027879/MG, 7-15-79. the basis of his work in botany and especially ~c., CHRONOLOGY, 12-11-78 (Halpern)md 12-18-78 his explorations of the Mayan peninsula. (Lundell). Martin Halpern, Geosciences, had been selected -925­ in December, 1978. J TUESDAY, July 17,1979 ) Norma Selvidge, Austin communications con­ siltant, conducted a seminar in that field, with sponsorship of the College of General Studies. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1987879/BA, 7-20-79. WEDNESDAY through FRIDAY, July 18-20, 1979 National discussions of utilities issues were held in the Fourth Annual Public Utilities Conference, organized by the Center iiIIn for Continuing Education. The meeting, held at the Fairmont Hotel in Dallas, centered on "The I mpact of National Energy Policy on the Southwest." Among speakers were Eliot Cutler, Associate Director for Natural Resources, Office of Management and Budget; and, Alan Erwin, who had recently resigned as head of the Texas Public Utiliies Commission. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1927879/MG, 6-29-79. PROGRAM, XE300, "4th Annual Public Utilities Conference," Patti Driskell, 7-18-79. FRIDAY, July 20, 1979 Adolf J. H..... Enthoven, director of the Center for International Accounting, The Uni­ versity of Texas at Dallas, had returned from a Glob,,1 Symposium on Development Banking, sponsored by the World Bank and United Nations. He had chaired the program on accounting and auditing for development banking at the Zurich meeting. . REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2037879/MG, 7-20-79. TUESDAY, July 24,1979 "Small Works" of Jerry Bywaters, a leader in modern art of the west and southwest, went on display in the Special Collections Gallery of McDermott Library. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1977879/BA, 7-10-79. ,

~

-fi6­ )

J CIRCA WEDNESDAY, August 1, 1979 ADVANCE featured Callier Center's Theater ) of the Deaf staging of "Under the Yum Yum Tree," and a return of Nathan Jones' works to the Special Collections Gallery, McDermott Library. Also covered were the Callier Center for Com­ munication Disorders' summer camp program for cleft palate children, and the selection of three members of The University of Texas at Dallas faculty for prestigious awards. Janis Mayes, Comparative Literature, received a second Ful­ bright-Hays scholarship for c.IInMII continued work I at the National University of the WI; &t¥ ~ 11/0,/ Abjidan, West Africa; Harvey J. Graff, HiSfOrY ~ and liiiiiiiIIu Edu~ation,was selected as one of five s,-n Spencer Fellows, to further his work at Newberry Library, Chicago, on a History of Literacy in the Western World. Steven ~ was I Rabe History designed as one of 11 Hoover Scholars", f~' , at the Hoover Library in West Branch, Iowa; there, (lJtarJ he continued \'~I•• his book covering United /t'f" States relations ith Venezuela, 1918-1976. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2117879/BA, 8-3-79. Summer graduation was announced for Saturday, August 25, in the Conference Center, with two ceremonies scheduled. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2067879/BA, 7-30-79. The issue also covered the School of Social Sciences, in the series on academic units; the Martin Katzman ) study on use of solar energy, and Jerry C. Moore's Office of Career Planning and Placement program. There was hope that improvements on Campbell and Floyd Roads would give better access to the campus. Campbell Road halilbeen two undivided lanes, but was being widened to six lanes with a

28-foot median/rom Central Expressway to Coit /2 ~..J- Road. The wort<: was proceediing,from Central _p~ Expressway to Nantucket Drive, with the second stage from there to Coit Road. Floyd Road was tI,6£. ( opened to six lanes for 350 feet north of Campbell Road, and new signals with protected left turns were to ,be installed, to aid traffic flow to and from the Lookout Drive main campus entrance. Ann Reiner, who was a research Associate with John Sommer's Public Policy Toward Animals project, had been in Alaska's Priblof Islands to _ ..L, observe the seal harvest. The\team had been tJ4,s,ltfllt:lT'th1-' formed by Friends of Anima s and the Committee for Humane Legislation.

Auditions for "Twelfth Night," to be directed by Shakesperean actor Richard Wordsworth, were scheduled August 31 and September 1. GENERAL REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.9, Augu$t, 197~ )

-927­ J / CIRCA WEDNESDAY, August 1, 1979

) ROland~(BuddY)Adams had instituted a series of calendar listings covering schedules for films, exhibits, plays and other Arts and Humanities events, as well as Continuing Edu­ cation programs, for reference by media. The Ii calendar was not circulated on the campus. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2017879/j' 7-20-79. THURSDAY, August 2, 1979 "Under the Yum Yum Tree" opened at Callier Center Theater of the Deaf, but was canceled after one night's ___ performance. 18_­ REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2007879/BA, 7-13-79. PROGRAM, XE600/630, "Under the Yum Yum Tree," with cancellation notation, 8-2-79. FRIDAY, August 3, 1979

A news release was issued on the appointments of Janis Mayes, Harvey Graff, and Stephen Rabe, following publication in ADVANCE. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2117879/BA, 8·3-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.9, August, 1979 cf., CHRONOLOGY, Circa 8-1-79. TUESDAY, August 7, 1979 J _ Guitarist Rick Madriguera and flautist Robert Ackerman were in concert in Green Center, during early evening I:triIIIIIMhours. Both were members of the Eastfield College music faculty, and Acker­ man was also a jazz instructor at Dallas Arts Magnet High School. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2127879/BA, 8-5-79. WEDNESDAY, August 15, 1979

Three Public Service Announcements were used to publicize The University of Texas at Dallas' Fall Semester enrollment. dates, August 22-23, and the low tuition rates. REF: NEWS RELEASESjPSA's XE128.216/217/218­ 7879/MG, 8-15-79. I t MONDAY, August ~ 20,1979 A/4Mt!:1/) ..bIaftfm J ones, leading Dallas black artist, returned to the campus to exhibit his "painting with a pencil" technique in the Special Collections Gallery of McDermott Library. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2107879/BA, 8-1-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.9, August, 1979 cf., CHRONOLOGY, circa 8-1-79. Nine seminars, short courses and workshops for business and i::IIIIIt industry, plus 40 personal 8M_", enrichment courses were offered by the Center for Continuing Education in its fall program. REFS~NEWS RELEASES XE128.221/222-7879/BA, 8-20-79. ) BROCHURES/MAILERS, XE300, "Personal Enrichment Courses, Fall, 1979" "Awarthess in Motion, A New Richardson Catalyst" , "Financing Small Business" -928­ " Fundamentals of Volunteer Managemen til J I REFS CONT: "Grantsmanship and Proposal Writing." (Final brochure production by Patti Driskell), I) CIRCA August 20. 2979. ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.1, September, 1979 WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, August 22-23, 1 979 Fall Semester registration was held, with classes op~ningMonday, August 27. Final enrollment r count was 5,882 (increasedlfrom 5,378 a year _ ?,5f/~/CI'P earlier), with 2,642 graduate registrations and 3,240 in the undergraduate colleges. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2077879/9A,8-1-79. Headcount Enrollment Summary, Office of the Registrar, 1982.

SATURDAY, August 25,1979

Summer graduation was held in the Conference Center, with Arts and Humanities, Management and Administration and Social. Sciences degrees awarded in a 9 a.m. section; Schools of NMttntI ?t!'4I"/iitI!!? .c-f,td/ 15 ..§eieRses, Human Development and "1 dU.JiU .., , " Mathematics and Natural Sciences awarded their diplomas at 10:30 a.m. Some 360 students were :S candidates for degrees. REt:;: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2067879/BA, 7-30-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.9, August, 1979. MONDAY, August 27,1979 Rehearsals began for the Greater Dallas Community ') Chamber Orchestra, directed by E. Harvey Jewell. Students at both The University of Texas at Dallas and s..IriJ Brookhaven College were eligible to participate for course credit (which required a fee payment), or as community members, on a non­ credit basis. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2057879/BA, 7-30-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 15, No.9, August, 1979. WEDNESDAY, August 29, 1979

The Community Chamber 6lrchestra scheduled its opening concert Sunday, November 18, in University Theatre, and the September-December program of I Season of the Arts events was published, beginning ,I with a joint exhibition of paintings by Le Roy Lawson of San Francisco and sculptures by Gary Miller of Savannah, September 7. Events ran through the annual Messiah Sing, with Stewart J. Clarklconduct~v~ on December 16. The University Theatre play was "Twelfth Night," directed by Richard Wordsworth, )XE6;0/600, opening October 26. REF: BROCHURE/MAILER' "Season of the Arts '79," 8-29-79. FRIDAY, August 31, 1979

A Texas Instruments 990/10 advanced minicomputer valued at $130,000, was loaned to the School of ~ Management and Administration by the company. Dean Paul Gaddis said the instrument would be chiefly used by graduate students and faculty ) members in research. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.2267879/MG, 8-31-79.

-END CHRONOLpGY, SUMMER SESSION, June through August, 1979­

-929­ J I MONDAY, September 3,1979

) The Labor Day holiday was observed. REF: AUDIO NEWS, TOR0817, 8-31-79.

CIRCA TUESDAY, September 4, 1979 ,.~/.M ADVANCE began.a:A8W volume with a special issue, covering the first 10 years of The University of Texas at Dallas' history. The Spring Dean's List was also published, naming undergraduates who had achieved Grade Point Averages from 3.25 to 4.0.

The historical record also went back into key dates of the antecedent Graduate Research Center of the Southwest/Southwest Center for Advanced Studies. Three pages of pictures covered events into 1969, from 1969 through 1975, and more modern scenes and people, 1975-1979. 4") Also announced was alii award" to Rabi S. Bhagat from the Division of Industrial and Organizational Psycholq(y of the American Psychological Associaticfn .. This was the 1979 James McKeen~1 award, which included a

ft)t:t~'/$500 prize. Research design was the basis for A the award. Bhagat, Organizational Behavior faculty member, won for his research proposal "The Effects of Personal Life Stress Upon . Individual Effectiveness and Work Adjustment Processes Within Organizational Settings."

In "Side Lights," Director of Libraries James T. Dodson had been elected Chairman of the Board of Trustees, AMIGOS Bibliographic Council, Inc.iAMIGOS was a new non-profit corporation, providing oni-Iine cataloging, interlibrary loan and other related services , to 146 member colleges and universities in the t seven states of the --. southwest. Dodson and .W President Bryce Jordan were influential in the _J,(J', establishment of AMIGOS, first within the Itlllll'" IAiel'\'f/fSity Council of North Texas, and later I" as a separate entity. "t::'/'t:Ittl", Margie..,..;IiMIriM-Director of International and Special Services, had been appointed to the Government Regulations Advisory Committee of the National Association for Foreign Student Affairs.

Zvi Kedem had received a $67,000 grant for research in computer graphics, on the topic of ) optimal surface reconstruction from sample points. National Science Foundation made the award. ~EF:ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.1, September, 1919.

-930­ J TUESDAY, September 4, 1979 Janet Garlow became editor of U·T·DATELINE. REF: U'T'DATELlNE, Volume XIV, No.4, 9-4-79. FRIDAY, September 7, 1979 ) Holly Barnett, a Richardson High School gradu­ ate who ha4been a Clark Foundation Research Participant during the summer, had made an international survey of newspaper content. The work was done under supervision of BIIlIIIIIIm Brantley Womack, Social ..... Sciences. The survey concluded that while the United States may be the home of fat newspapers, babiESia there were weak spots in international news, in-depth reporting, and local news. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.00279~.9-7-79;

MONDAY, September 10,1979

Registration headcount was announced as 5,772 students in a news release. (Later, in 1982, the

Headcount Enrollment SLl~",er,Office of the 1'dtl"lJI'Id"/JRegistrar, listed this registration as "'5,882). REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0097980/MG, 9-10-79. Headcount Enrollment Summary, Office of the Registrar, 1982. WEDNESDAY, September 12, 1979 ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.2, October, 1979

The University of Texas at Dallas entered an agreement with North Texas State University permitting students to attend Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps classes at NTSU. The cross-enrollments were subject to UT-Dallas students passing the AFROTC qualifying exam­ ination. REF: U'T'DATELlNE, Volume XIV, No.7, 9-13-79.

Nobel Laureate Polykarp Kusch began a series of lectures in the Conference Center on "The Human Pred icament." REF: AUDIO NEWS, TOR0803, 9-10-79.

THURSDAY, September 13,1979

Mrs. Wenonah Ann Hanson, wife of William B. Hanson, Space Sciences, died of cancer. Burial ( services te held at RI bl Roseau, Minnesota. A memorial service was held Saturday, September 22, at Restland Memorial Chapel, with scriptural reading by Joseph E. Green and a euology by Phil McClure, Research Scientist.

Mrsfi Hanson was survived by her husband, sons Bryan, Craig and David, and daughter Karen. She had been an active member of the SCAS Wives and UTD Women's Clubs. REFS: AUDIO NEWS, TOR0752, 9-17-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.2, October, 1979.

Questions of Transportation, Energy (with some concerns that gasoline might rise to a cost of $5 ) a gallon); the Changing Family, the Role of Women, and the Cultural Arts were discussed in a series of five programs entitled AIM2000. The series was

-931­ J THURSDAY, September 13, 1979 (CONT)

) sponsored by the Service League of Richardson and held in the Conference Center. Among leading speakers were John C. Whitaker, former Undersecretary, Department of the Interior, and Frankie Hewitt, Executive Producer of Fo~'sTheatre, Washington, D. C. REF: POSTER/MAILER XE300, (fAIM2000," 'd circa August, 1979. SUNDAY, September 16, 1979

The Dallas Chamber Players, directed by Peter Vollmers, opened their concert season with selections from Gustav Mahler and Francis Poulenc. Vollmers was on clarinet, with flautist Rita Almond; Barbara Brazil on )fboe, Sterling Proctor on horn, and Charles Price on bassoon. Mitta Angell was pianist. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0037980/BA, 9-7-79. PROGRAM/BIOGRAPHIES, XE630, "Dallas Chamber Players," 9-16-79. MOVE UP FRIDAY, September 14, 1979

Ie = __ ....J~_ • I ____ !_ rmvrlMiiiw Iii M';' iIIW'fMj'RI Kathryn Rudie Harrigan, Business and Social Policy, was annou nced as winner f tfll of the 1979 General Electric Award for Oustanding Research in Social Management. A $500 prize was given with the award, which was made by the 8IIiIBI Business and Policy Planning Division of the Academy of Management in Atlanta. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0137980/MG, 9-14-79.

WEDNESDAY, September 19, 1979

A five-page news release formally announced the coming of Richard Wordsworth to The University of Texas at Dallas as director, actor , and teacher~ Great-great grandson of British t Poet Laureate William W l:dIiB Wordsworth :scAe'~~ (circa 1845) he was first{fo direct and play the part of Malvolio in "Twelfth Night." The play was scheduled in University Theatre October 26-28 and November 2-4. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0187980/BA, 9-19-79. ADVANCE, VolYfRe 16, No.2, October, 1979. ".. A news release was made on Rabi S. Bhagat's rece~tof the James McKeen Cattell Award, follotving publication in' ADVANCE. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0177980/MG, 9-19-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.1, September, 1979 cf., CHRONOLOGY, circa 9-4-79.

) FRIDAY, September 21, 1979 Raymond P. Lutz was named Executive Dean for Graduate Studies, to replace Francis S.

-932­ J FRIDAY, September 21, 1979 (CONT)

) Johnson, who had been named by President Jimmy Carter as Assistant Director of the National Science Foundation (as a note, the news release on Lutz preceded that of the Johnson appointment).

Dean Lutz had served as Dean of the School of Management and Administration, after joining the faculty of The University of Texas at Dallas in 1973. He had previously been acting chairman of the University of Okla­ ho~ School of Industrial Engineering. ~ A Fellow of the American Association for thr Advancement of Science and the American Institute of Industrial Engineers, Lutz was serving on the AilE board of trustees and was Vice President, Industry and Manage­ ment Division. He was editor of "Industrial Engineering" and of the John Wiley'Handbook on Economics, Finance and Accounting." REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0227980/MG, 9-21-79. ADVANCE, Volume 16, No.2, October, 1979.

MONDAY, September 24, 1979

A collection of classical music scores, from ) the 18th into the 20th century, including 300 volumes of symphony and opera scores, was available for public review in McDermott Library's Special Collections. Don Hendricks, Director of Libraries at the University of New Orleans, had brought the ,ollection together. L-C REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0287980/MG, 9-24-79.

TUESDAY, September 25, 1979 The news release about Francis S. Johnson'S { appointment to the National Science Foundation as overseer of astronomical, atmospheric, earth and oceanic sciences, was sent out. The appointment had actually not been confirmed by the Senate as yet, but confirmation was expected by early October.

Johnson was one of the first space scientists to join Lloyd V. Berkner in the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest/Southwest Center for Advanced Studies, coming from the Lockheed Missiles and Space Company" In 1966, he had received the Space Science Award of the --..... i;' /fl'2. American Institute of Aeronautics and Astro­ ) nautics for his discovery that the earth is enveloped in hydrogen beyond the lower atmosphere. -933­

j I TUESDAY, September 25,1979 {CONT}

) As an adviser to the national space program, he developed the concept of the Lunar Atmos­ pheric Detector; the first such instrument was placed on the moon in 1969. J ohnson ~ served as President of The Uni­ versity of Texas at Dallas during the 1969-1971 interim, prior to President Bryce Jodran's r FIJ.E:, ;z.o s.tt "J)~9-ZS-7? IC, Volume 1, Nos. 20-21, 5-10 and 5-17-72

THURSDAY, September 27 through SUNDAY, September 30, 1979

Callier Center Theater of the Deaf,..., produced 1 tlrt'f "The ~tap~in Aram Glorig Auditorium. An fllfCljl\ additional line, 783-3042, was opened for reservations f by deaf persons using teletype communications. REF: AUDIO NEWS, TOR0817, 9-24-79.

THURSDAY, September 27, 1979

The United Way campaign was underway, with the UT-Dallas goal set at $7,000. Administrative Setvices Director Norman McNabb was co-ordinator of the campaign. REF: U'T'DATELlNE, Volume XIV, No. 11, , 9-27-79. t

CIRCA MONDAY, October 1,1979

ADVANCE featured the appointments of Francis S. johnson and Executive Graduate Dean Raymond P. Lutz, plus the enrollment increase of 9.39 percent; also fOlJll featured was the inaugural series of" . ." Andrew R. Cecil Lectures, on "The Thil .. W8!l"(....( Moral Values In a Free Society. lli, S._IIII fer a r>IBitt it I'P' Order" The lectures were scheduled November 6, 12, 19 and 26, with Cecil speaking on "The Thjrd Way: The Search for a New Social Orde!t' and Dogmas and Moral Values" in the first two programs.'thristian Ethics in ) Economic Life" and "Human Rights and World IiIiI Citizenship" were the closing topics. (As a note, the Proceedings of the inaugural series

-934­ J CIR?: A MONDAY, October 1, 1979 (CONT) ) are presented in a somewhat different set of chapter titles from those announced as lecture topics.) REF: Book/Proceedings: "The Third Way: Enlightened Capitalism and the Search for a New Social Order," (C) 1979 by Andrew R. Cecil, Library of Congress Number 79-92910, 175 pp.

Also announced in ADVANCE were plans for "British Fortnight" in co-operation with Neiman­ Marcus, the scheduled events to run October 15 through October 21. Events included production of "Twelfth Night" in University Theatre, under direction of British actor Richard Wordsworth, oponing October 26; 1alks on "English Country Gardens" by Joan Chandler, October 16, and "Englishmen and Other Britons," by Victor Worsfold,October4ilih 18.

Chamber Music was scheduled October 21, by the Recorder Consort and Woodwind Quintet, with E. Harvey Jewell directing. Also P ..... nt listed were British films including an October 22 running of "Hamlet" and "Romeo and Juliet," with Nancy Cluck as narrator. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0317980/BA, 10-2-79.

The General Electric award to Kathryn Rudie Harrigan was noted; Animal Rights leader Michael W.1IIiin Fox was announced as lecturer on "Between Animals and Man," in a Conference Center program of October 17; On November 8, Stanley Marcus was scheduled to speak on his recent book, "Quest for the Best."

A feature story was published on Richard Wordsworth's plans as a Visiting Associate Professor at The University of Texas at Dallas, ilml .'; 'the , "Twelfth Night" staging. Intludl" hf t

UT-Dallas' staff training program was funded for the second year by the Governor's Budget and Planning Offic~continuing the "Developing the Mid-Management Employee" theme established in 1978.

Memorial services for Mrs. William B. Hanson were reported, plus the establishment of a memorial ~ fund, to be directed to the Francis Brennan Nursing Fund at Gaston Episcopal Hospital, Dallas. REF: ADVANCE' Vol. 16, No.2, October, 1979.

-935­ )

J .., THURSDAY, October 4,1979 ) Texas ceramics artists jim Watral and Bill Dennard placed their works on exhibit in the Visual Arts Gallery through October 30. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0297980/BA, 10-4-79. BROCHURE, XE630, jim Watrai/Bill Dennard,

10-2-~. If SATURDAY, October 6, 1979

More than 20 selected pages from a postal history collection made for the Chicago () l.-9lumbian Exposition were displayed in "/ t~eWineburgh Philatelic Research Library through October 21. The exhibit was loaned by Gordon G. Blueler of Dallas,linciuded ~ the first commemorative stamp issued by the United States, marking the discovery of the new world by Christopher Columbus. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0247980/MC, 10-8-79. ~,...... 'l1! REF Note: Millicent Green had married Tom Cummings, " 1 WFAA-TV (Ch. 8) sports PhotOgr~. TUESDAY, October 9, 1979

C. Lee Walton, Jr., Dallas executive in the management consultant firm of McKinsey and Company, Inc., was recipient of the Nelle C. johnston Award for 1979. The award was made for outstanding service to The University of Texas a~ Dallas.

Walton was Chairman of the Advisory Council for the School_ of Management and Admin­ istration, and also served as a trustee and director of The Association for Graduate I Education and 8 22221 Research (TAGER). REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0307980/BA, 10-9-79. f t?,t'/f/;'NA /'?XqS ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.3, November, 1979

THURSDAY, October 11, 1979

Dean Paul Gaddis, School of Management and Administration, was also Chairman of the Board, Globe Ticket Company, and had led negotiations for the sale of that company to International Banknote Company, Inc:i IDC acquired all shares of Globe, one of the largest and oldest ticket suppliers for sports and entertainment, at $103.45 a share, a total of $8.2 million. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0407980/MC, 10-11-79.

WEDNESDAY, October 17, 1979

) Michael W. Fox, international animal)tights leader, spoke on "Between Animal and Man." The lecture was sponsored by the School of

-936­ j WEDNESDAY, October 17, 1979 (CONT)

Social Sciences, as part of the Public PolicY ) Toward Animals Project organized by Dean John Sommer and Research Associate Anne Reiner. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0267980/BA, 9-24-79 WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY, October 17-18, 1979 Two additional Oral History recordings were made, AI Mitchell interviewing Gifford K. Johnson, second President of the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest/Southwest Center for Advanced Studies; and Brigtrn Bryghte D. Godbold, Who had served as Staff Vice Presi­ dent, GRCSW, 1963·1965. Godbold had then been Staff Director of Goals for Qs:1I•• Dallas, 1965 to 1973. REFS: ORAL HISTORY, No. 14, Gifford K. Johnson, 10-17·79. 1St ORAL HISTORY, NQ. W, Bryghte D. Godbold, 1 0·18-79 (two cassettes) ct., CHRONOLOGY, Summary of Oral History Recordings Nos. 1 through 12, circa August 30, 1978. (~NOTE: Oral History No. 13 is a series of ~informal interviews made at the 10th Anniversary program, Texas Room, Founders North; 9-25-79) SUNDAY, October 21, 1979

The Recorder Consort and Woodwind Quintet ) joined in an Instrumental Solo and Chamber Ensemble Concert, directed by E. Harvey Jewell. REF: XE630, Program, Instrumental Solo and ~ .Chamber Ensemble Concert, 10-21-79. ~----- TUESDAY, October 23, 1979 MONDAY, October 22, 1979 William E. Claggett, former Special Assistant for Urban Two high-level government officials were Policy, Department of Commerce, joined the School of appointed as part·time faculty members. Social Sciences faculty. A Harvard graduate, he had Daniel Beard, Deputy Assistant Secretary for been with Real Estate Research Corporation and Land and Water Resources, Department of Arthur D. little, Inc., prior to his government service. the Interior, was named adjunct professor \.REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0527980/MC, 10-22-79. of Political Economy. Peter House, Director { of the Office of Technology I mpacts, Depart· ment of Energy, was named visiting professor of Pofitical Economy. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0537980/M~-23-79. <:;~ October 24, 1979

is ~9~~son,on leave from The University of Texas at Dall~to the National Science Foundation, received the United States Air Force Award for "'s.MI ias Civilian Service ~"ifl:9/'..rr;:s The citation was for outstanding service as a member of the USAF Scientific Advisory Board, November, 1968 through June, 1979. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0667980/MC, 10-24-79.

THURSDAY, October 25, 1979 ) Paul Monaco, History, was appointed to the Television Architks Advisory Committee of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XEl28.0687980/MC, 10-25-79. -937- ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.4, December, 1979. J FRIDAYS through SUNDAYS, Octoberr 26-28 and November 2-4 ) "Twelfth Night" was produced in University Theatre, under direction of Robert Wordl6rth, who also played Malvolio. Ron Donigan Played Orsino and Carolyn fiiIIa Gillespie wasp-st as Viola, with Bill Dorsett as Sir Toby Belch. C Richard Kurjan played Sir Andrew Aguecheek; Michael Gillespie was Feste, the clown, and Jay Hall played Sebestian. Linda K. Williamson was technical director. Musicians were Jeannie Clark Fisher, soprano; Margaret Bennett, alto; Wade ...., Bennett, tenor and Stewart Clark, bass. Peter Fekety played the recorder and Deborah Fox, the lute. REFS: POSTER/MAILER, Season ofthe Arts '79, 8-29-79. PROGRAM, XE600, UTwelfth Night, or What You Will," 10-26-79. TUESDAY, October 30, 1979 Callier Center for Communication Disorders received a year-around, covered swimming pool for principal use of deaf/blind children enrolled in special programs at the 1966 Inwood Road campus. The pool was given by Weight Watchers of Dallas, Inc. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0717980/MC, 10-30-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.4, December, 1979 auui:'; FRoI'6AY, '40.cl1ihel a, I"!) CIRCA THURSDAY, November 1, 1979

ADVANCE led off with the Nelle C. Johnston Award to C. Lee Walton, Jr., of Dallas, and the establishment of a new scholarship by the Northwood Women's Club. The scholarship gave preference to persons who wished to resume university study after interruption by personal crisis or reversal. , Also featured was the November 11 opening of concerts by the Greater Dallas CIIItt:l Community t Chamber Orchestra at Brookhaven Community College, followed by a _ LSi November 18 performance at The University of Texas at Dallas. A summary of more than 100 project awards ,...... ,. for research was published, by the Office of Sponsored Projects. There had been a 19 percent increase in funding granted by the" State of Texas, and a total of $328,389 awarded from appropriated funds, in addition, to awards by federal and private agencies. )<7

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)

J ! CIRCA THURSDAY, November 1,1979 (CONT) ) Works by Frank Armstrong, award-winning Texas photographer, were on display through December 7 in the Visual Arts Studios. Title of the exhibit was uLand and Man." Armstrong had won the 1979 Paisano Fellowship for his series on ulandscape and social scape." REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0547980/BA, 10-19-79. BROCHURE/MAILERLFrank Armstrong, Land ..oIu.-..,.and Man," 11-1-79. -( XE60"

~.H,( John Hoffman"presented a paper on uMass Spectrometer Measurements of the Venus Atmosphere" at the American Vacuum Society's National Symposium in New York City. Richard Hodges, Ken Duerksen and Willie Wright shared the authorship. Hoffman was on leave, working at the Max Planck IIIIIIlnstutit fur Kern Physik (nuclear physics), in Heidelberg, West Germany; he was making further anaylsis of data from ISIS, Atmospheric Explorer and Pioneer Venus missions, comparing results ) obtained by UT-Dallas and the institute. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.3, November, 1979.

'I Five students received Amelia A. L~(THURSDAY~mber1 1979 Textbook Scholarships in a program at the " home of President and Mrs. Bryce Jordan. The awards were $100 certificates for" use in the UT-Dallas bookstore. Awards went to S. Brooks Morton, geography senior; J. Ann Andelman, philosophy senior; Susan JohnSon, political sciencer senior; Lynn Moore, senior, and Linda , Looney, political science senior. President ~~ , Jerry C. Moore of the UTD Women's Club~ £:.. made the presentations. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0747980/MC, 11-1-79.

TUESDAY, November 6, and MONDAYS, November 12, 19 and 26, 1979

Inaugural lectures in the Andrew R. Cecil series on uMoral Values in a Free Society" e) opened in HoblitUle Hall, Andrew R. Cecil /~ - Auditorium Cecil be8tmrseries. The ___ Uld.:f..:y;~/t'/l ,Ihe-eAf7/'f/ ) as speCific tit e was "The Ird Way: Enlight­ ened Capitalism and the Search for a New Social Order. It -939­ )

J TUESDAY, November 6 and MONDAYS, November 12, 19 and 26, 1979 (CONT) ) The series was continued on three consecutive Monday evenings in the Conference Center.

The lectures were published in hard-back book form. (As a note, the format of the series was changed in following years, and the schedule was revised to present both Cecil and other speakers on successive days, with some of the programs held off-campus. Scheduled a year ahead, for the 1980 lecture~were Leon ,fo/'11le/"Jaworski, '0 Q b ie Special Prosecutor and Houston attorney, who also had headed the "­ Board of the Southwestern Legal Foundation, /lJ-Z9-7'1 and ADM James Stockdale)~ REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0567980/BA, 16-~. BOOK, "The Third Way: Enlightened Capitalism and the Search for a New Social Order," 175 pp., (C) 1979, Andrew R. Cecil; published by The University of Texas at Dallas. Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 79-92~ THURSDAY, November 8, 1979 Stanley Marcus, .. who had been a leader in raising private funding for the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest, discussed the ideas expressed in his latest book, "Quest for the Best," in a campus program. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0557980/BA, 10-19·79. FRIDAY, November 9, 1979

Lauriston C. (Larr~hall,who had recruited .. many of the original faculty of the Southwest r Center for Advanced Studies, died at 77 , near ,his t!Qd.:1'iztLAdYJI"/lR,¥' .. ho,ne in Gualala, California. Marshall had also joined with Lloyd V. Berkner in a study on history of oxygen in the Earth's atmosphere; the theory of oxygen evolution was first strongly opposed by several leading sCientists,when it was made public in 1964, but was later generally accepted. , Marshall, who had been born in China, the son of a missionary family, was with VARO, Inc., in Garland when he joined the GRCSW staff as chief of scientific personnel, equivalent to service as provost. A graduate of Park College (Missouri), he had earned his doctorate in physics at the University of California, Berkeley.

Marshall aided in development of early cyclotron accelerators with Ernest H. Lawrence, at Berkeley, and also served in World War II radar development at the Massachusettllnstitute of Technology's Radiation Laboratory. He was a Fellow of the Institute of Electrical and Electron~Engineers. REFS: ADVANCE, Volume 16, No.4, December, 1979 He had also supervised constructiori'ot the High ORAL HISTORY, No.2, Lauriston C. Marshall ) Field Magnetic Laboratory, which was intended and AI Mitchell, at Gualala, California, 6-4-78. (Full to be an element of a M,terials Division. transcript made, and edited by Marshall). Q./ -940­

J )

SUNDAY, November 11, 1979 Pianist Nancy Burton Garrett was featured in a Sigma Alpha Iota recital. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0497980/BA, 10-17-79. The Greater Dallas Community Chamber Orch­ estra opened its , 11 season at Brookhaven Community College, under direction of E. Harvey Jewell. Arkady Fomin of the Dallas Symphony Orchestra was $~:~:master;principals were Lynn Horner, . IIi Billye Wendland, Viola; Yury Anshelevich of the DSO, Cello, and Roger Fratina, Bass. Anshelevich, who was also Colishaw Artist-in-Residence at The University of Texas at Dallas, was soloist for the Haydn''Celio Concerto in 0 Major,"'Fomin was soloist in/J\ir on the G String'by Bach. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0707980/BA, 11-2-79. PROGRAM, XE630, Greater Dallas Community .­ Chamber Orchestra, Debut Performances, 11-11-79 . (As a note, the program was repeated one week later in University Theatre, as a second "debut!' REF: POSTER/MAILER, XE630, Greater Dallas ) Community Chamber Orchestra, 11-18-79. FRIDAY, November 16, 1979

The UTD Civic Chorale, directed by Stewart J. Clark, presented Carl Orff's 1937 "Carmina Burana," a modern musical setting for medieval songs and poems, written for chorus and orchestra. Soprana Susan Barrow, Larry Floyd, tenor; and John McFadden, bass, were vocal soloists. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0817980/BA, 11-9-79. The untranslated scripts were based on Latin PROGRAM, XE630, Carmina Burana, 11-16-79. , POSTER, Carmina Burana, 11-16-79. and German collections of the 12th century, f found in a Bavarian m0!lstery.

Named in the 1979-80 edition.9f "Who's Who Among AI. i.tn Students in!;merican Uni­ versities and Colleges'"were 32 from The University of Texas at Dallas. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0857980/MC, 11-16-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.4, December, 1979. MONDAY, November 19, 1979

The UTD Astronomical Observatory was open, located on "Hill 730" of the northwest campus, L1'l but reachable only by going north fIf Coit Road {)I' above Campbell Road, east on Frankford Road, and south on a farm road to the site. The access roads were usually passable, but presented some ) difficulty in wet weather.

-941­

J I MONDAY, November 19, 1979 (CONT) ) Dr. John Allen, a Richardson physician, had donated the 16-inch Newtonian telescope and a companion six-inch guide telescope m to The University of Texas at Dallas. Intents were to use the system for astronomy courses in both as••lIuua academic and continuing educa­ tion programs. The circular _: bcsi81brick structure, with rotating dome, was to be expanded, according to initial plans. The Smithsonian Institution "MoonwatchU Program had provided another 10-inch telescope, and Doctor Allen had also donated a five-inch.

The Phase II expansion was never completed. There was a fairly regular schedule of public openings held by the UTD Astronomical Society, arranged principally by David at Klumpar, Physics, but interest appeared to dwindle due to bad-weather delays and cancellations, the .. location, and the unheated structure. l6.s'eAlak~ By 1986, the s.DItIIfe was torn down to make way for extension of Waterview Drive as a divided, major access thoroughfare extending into Indepen­ dance Parkway in Plano, and for the construction. , ~ "" ;;~ of first related-science buildingsf6y companies //1 ¥.11'/'7 r including Dresser Industries, VMX, Inc., (Voice / ) Message Exchange), Sun Oil Company, and Espey, Huston & Associates, Inc. In addition to other observatory problems, there had been an increase in ambient light from expanding North Dallas and Richardson locations. There was intent to move the observatory to a Colli", County location, at the ~ Heard Museum grounds southwest of McKinney J but no action was taken within the year. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0867980fMC, 11-19-79. ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.4, December, 1979 , Slide Carousel, "History of GRCSWfSCAS-UTD,'" t two slides, circa October, 1979 and Spring, 1980. Program by AI Mitchell, Richardson Historical Society,October 20, 1985 (subject to later revisions). .//"-­ MONDAY, November It.~13ple'Y GeoDbvsicists from the{ReDUblictRf China Vlslteertne campus, representing e State Seismological Bureau. Director Zou Yu headed the group,,, which included Mrs. Mei Shriong, Zhang Yilin, Fang Wei Quing, and Zou Qi Jia. The tour, which included a visit to Teledyne-Geotech in the Dallas area, had been arranged by the United States )(£/2'1...... Geological Survey. . RE(: NEWS RELEASE,,(No Serial Number) fMC, 11-21-7~

) -942­ ~VYIIAlc.r;:;f/4,/. I~.A49. ~ .P~~It'r, /17'1

J TUESDAY, November 27,1979 ) Igor YouskevitchJan Olympic athlete of 1932, and a leading male ballet dancer, spoke on "Ballet Russe Companies in America:'"After service in the United States Navy during World War II, he had been principal male dancer in a '/'~ the Ballet Russe de Monte , and a ;:?"I joined The University of Texas at Austin daNCE ___ dance faculty in 1971. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.08811 7980/BA,11-20-79.

A large research collection on reading, by the late William S. Gray, was added in microfiche by McDermott Library. Gray, who was Dean of Education, the University of Chicago, was the originator of the "Dick and Jane" reader series. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0897980/MC, 11-27-79. SATURDAY, December 1, ~ 1979 Two plays for children were staged twice, in Jonsson Center Performance Hall. One, based on"'Cinderella," was directed by Patti Arnold, and offered participation by members of the young audiences. "The Nation of ' ., Imaj" ~ written .,d directed by Scott Davis, concerned teaching of the Golden Rule to a pair of quarreling characters. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0827980/BA, 11-13-79. SUNDAY, December 2, 1979 "Celebration of Christmas," a multi-media linkage of slides and vobl music, opened holiday season concerts at The University of Texas at Dallas. Sue Higgins was narrator, with instrumental accompaniments including oboe by E. Harvey Jewell. Janette Williams s -., and Mary Ella Antahades directed the program. REF: NEWS RELEASE BA,11-20-79 . .... XE128.0877980/_ AleQ9.;1(?/I:77) )(;F"4:}O 'VA t:"11/e~~ or MONDAY, December 3, 1979 " .I CA",..,':T/-mQ,.;1, 4' ,,l- Z-7~ UTD's Jazz Ensemble was directed by E. Harvey Jewell in a program of works by Stevie Wonder, Chick Corea and Dizzy Gillespie. / The event was in University Theatre. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0877980/BA, 11-20-79. ; CIRCA MONDAY, December 3, 1979 ADVANCE featured the Astonomical Observ­ atory, the gift of a year-around pool to Callier Center for Communication Disorders, and the establishment of a $5,000 student loan fund by gift of Chaparral Steel Company. Also covered was the CONSERT program, in which Ernest Gotts and Paul Pattavina were working with Texas secondary teachers in a four-phase training program directed toward meeting .. needs of regular classroom ) teachers who had students with emotional and behavioral problems.

-943­ J ­ CIRCA MONDAY, December 3,1979 (CONT) ) The Gray.£ollection on reading, plus an additional collection of classical music scores in McDermott library, were noted. Also, the issue of Volume 4, "Wrightia," by C. L. Lundell was covered. The issue l'! I'd ti.ld'..$ d~tlcNeI'~ fossil leaf specimens discovered in central Europe, 1965-71, but previously found in Central America and Mexico. The University of Texas at Dallas, including Callier Center for Communication Disorders, had given a $6,550 collection to United Way; ifhis, said Norman W. McNabb, Director of Administrative Services, was 23 percent more than the goal sought by United Way. A complete list of students who had been selected for "Who's Who Among Students of American Colleges and Universitieswas published. Thirty-two had been named in the 1979-80 selections. Paul Monaco's appointment to the Televisoon Archives Advisory Committee, Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, was listed in the issue's Sidef:it!IiIMscolumn. Ll9Ah ) The death of Lauriston C. (larry) Marshall, ~ who had served as Chief of Scientific Personnil! for the Graduate Research Center of the Southwest, was recorded. REF: ADVANCE, Vol. 16, No.4, December, 1979 TUESDAY, December 4, 1979

Oft-cursed Central Expressway was covered by video cassette camera from a helicopter, but the photographer was not from a local television station. He was David Morgan, , Geography and Political Economy, and the tapes were used later in his course on "The t Internal Structure of Cities." The course was being taught for the fifth time, but the w.IMo video tapes were used for the first time. Both the aerial recordings and others made #/ldhrtJ at ground level were in ~platiOQof Wh~ cities are laid",in certain ways and expan IJt/f in organized patterns. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0917980/MC, 12-4-79. ADVANCE, Volume 16, No.5, February 1980. FRIDAY-SUNDAY, December 7-9, 1979 5AlfJd .: Four~'Playsof the SU" were directed ~bsurd" by Theatre students. The students were Elizabeth Cassimatis, Kwasi Kwarteng, ) Mary Ellen McCallum" Mark Wil1... IJd. ItAd Widener. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0827980/BA, 11-13-79. POST£R, XE600, "Absurd Nights,"12-7" 79 ...... -944­ J FRIDAY-SUNDAY, December 7-9 and December 14-16 ) "The littlest Angel" was staged by Callier ,.. Theater of th~ Deaf, with direction by Tom Cantu. Eight actors, with three mar~_ used spoken word and sign language to tell t e story of Michael, the shepherd boy who founcLIl'~~1.I' in the "heavenly everafter;' but cjp lit under­ stand why he.:ill there. c-',,// 4m::- REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0797980/BA, 11-7-79. ;t.!/lS POSTER/PROGRAM, "The littlest Angel," 12-7-79. 1'\

X.!f~,3.0 The musical was produced through gift of / rights by the author, Lan O'Kun, who had done the script for the Hallmark Hall of Fame. ~ MONDAY, December 10, 1979 Collegium Musicum, directed by Robert )(1/17:.$0, Xavier Rodriguez, was in Winter Concert. REF: POSTER/MAILER, "Collegium Musicum," 12-10-79. " WEDNESDAY, December 12, 1979

Eliezer Gavish, senior lecturer in geophysics at the University of Tel Aviv, was lecturing in sedimentoldifgy and stratigraphy at The University of Texas at Dallas, as a visiting Fulbright Scholar. . had become familiar with UT-Dallas when Martm alpern taug at Tel Aviv in 1977-78r a native of Russia who had moved to Israel as a boy, (;a¥is hrd been \.0'111':$'1, educatliiied in the United States, ~t ulane and Dartmouth Universities, . his doctorate at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. -;pm",..",.! REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0947980/MC, 12-12-79. Gordon Bleuler's collection of classic Christmas cards, covering more than 100 years, was on display in the Special Collections Gallery of McDermott library, adjacent to the Wineburgh Philatelic Research library. REF: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1007980/MC, 12·12-79. SUNDAY, December 16, 1979 "Messiah Sing," covering the initial two parts , of Handel's "Messiah," was presented in University Theatre. The UTD Civic Chorale t sang from within the audience. Chamber orchestra accompaniment was directed by l Harvey Jewell. ~. Overall direction was by'" Stewart J. Clark. Scriptural readings were byfaculty members including Dean Gavin R. G. Hambly, Arts and Humanities; Joan Chandler, Director of j,lndergraduate ~udies;Victor Worsfold, ..... '"i\ssistant to the-Vice President for Academic Affairs, and Dean C. S. (Stan) Rupert, Natural Sciences and Mathematics. The public was invited /z--/-79 to bring its own scores and join in the choruses. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.0927980/BA, 12=4-79-:­ POSTER/MAILER, XE630, up I III "Messiah Sing," 12·16·79. ) ,efA:'h1)~XF,~q '%1I/~~dAS~ If /"Z -t6- 7'l -945­

J ­ MONDAY, December 17, 1979

-, Cyrus Duncan Cantrell 111,who had been at The University of Texas at Dallas as a visiting associate professor during the fall, was appointed to the Physics faculty. His appointment was made effective with the Fall semester, 1980. Meantime, he was to serve as a visiting associate professor at the l!iltnlMeLaboratory of Physics and LASERS, the University of Paris-Nord. He had come to UT-Dallas from the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, after being there since 1972. Cantrell was a graduate of Harvard University, but had earned master's and doctoral degrees in physics at Princeton. He had been an associate professor of physics at Swarthmore College prior to joining the Los Alamos laboratory. REF: NEW; RELEASE XE128.1017980/MC, 12-17-79. The Christmas holiday period was underway, with Fall semester graduation scheduled in two sections on Saturday, January 5, in the Conference Center. Spring semester registration was announced for Monday and Tuesday, January 7 and 8. REFS: NEWS RELEASE XE128.1047980/MC, and NEWS RELEASE XE128.1057980/MC, 12-21-79.

-END CHRONOLOGY, FALL SEMESTER· -September through December, 1979­ 'I)

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