Newspaper Page Text
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2
T
H
E
A
L
U
M
N
I
N
E
W
S
August
1972
New
Science
Building
Ready
For
Fall
Semester
The
new
science
building
which
is
nearly
completed
will
be
in
use
in
September.
It
is
the
largest
building
on
campus
and
is
equal
in
space
to
the
total
of
the
class
room
building
completed
four
years
ago
plus
Cantwell
Hall.
The
cost
of
this
building
furnished
is
one
million
dollars.
At
the
west
end
of
the
first
floor
there
are
four
large
rooms
for
the
life
sciences,
one
for
lec
tures
and
three
labs
for
subjects
such
as
Biology,
Plant
Physiology,
Botany
and
Ecology.
A
greenhouse
to
provide
additional
facilities
for
this
work
is
in
the
planning
stage
and
will
be
started
soon.
It
will
be
located
at
the
rear
of
this
building
not
far
from
the
other
life
science
laboratories.
At
the
east
end
of
this
floor
are
the
chemistry
labor
atories
and
work
rooms.
Also,
a
large
student
work
room
where
students
may
find
work
space
be
tween
classes.
On
the
second
floor
there
is
a
large
physics
lab
and
physics
equipment
room;
labs
for
Geology,
Mechanical
Drawing,
Accounting,
Photography
with
darkroom
facil
ities,
computer
work
and
two
large
lecture
rooms.
There
are
nineteen
faculty
offices
in
the
building.
At
the
rear
center
of
the
build
ing
there
is
an
auditorium
with
a
sloping
seat
arrangement
which
will
seat
four
hundred.
The
height
of
the
auditorium
is
the
same
as
the
main
two-story
building.
This
allows
for
a
rear
view
projection
screen
at
the
second
level.
There
will
be
standard
type
projection
and
screen
as
well.
Equipment
space
is
available
to
make
this
auditorium
a
true
multiple
use
area.
It
will
be
used
for
lectures,
for
play
productions
and
for
movies.
Alumni
Park
Is
Well
Underway
Professor
Richard
Weigel
and
hi«L.jRecreation
242
students
are
continuing
work
on
the
Alumni
Park.
By
the
end
of
the
summer
they
will
have
erected
an
impress
ive
entrance
sign
to
the
College,
constructed
of
stone
work
and
wood
poles,
have
completed
the
poured
cement
sitting
wall
around
the
park
pool,
and
have
done
much
of
the
grading
and
seeding.
The
park
is
located
between
the
Phelps
Smith
administration
build
ing
and
Livermore
Hall.
When
it
is
completed
next
year,
the
21/&
acre
area
will
feature
a
central
pool
with
fountains
and
lights,
radiating
walkways,
and
superb
landscaping.
Its
immediate
effect
will
be
to
beautify
the
campus,
and
provide
a
recreational
area
for
the
college
community.
It
will
be
functional
as
well.
Franck
Houch,
PSC
’58,
who
owns
(Continued
on
page
3,
col.
3)
A
front
view
of
PSC’s
newest
and
largest
building,
the
New
Science
Building,
built
on
the
site
of
the
former
Freer
Hall
building.
About
Alumni
—
PAUL
McGIVNEY
and
TOM
BOONE,
both
of
'69,
are
employed
at
the
Holiday
Inn
in
Lake
Placid,
Florida,
and
would
enjoy
hearing
from
any
of
their
old
classmates.
Address:
U.S.
27,
South
of
Lake
Placid
Lake
Placid,
Florida
33852
TED
BATSIS,
’65,
and
his
wife
stopped
in
for
a
visit,
while
on
their
honeymoon,
on
Feb.
21st,
1972.
Ted
manages
Peterson’s
Riverside
Inn,
Redbank,
New
Jer
sey.
Address:
11
Howland
Avenue
Longbranch,
New
Jersey
07740
CHRIS
COLSEY,
’67,
visited
and
stayed
in
the
Hotel
Saranac
over
Feb.
19th,
1972
weekend.
He
graduated
from
Denver
Univ.
and
now
owns
an
exclusive
catering
business
in
Greenwich,
Conn.
Ad
dress
:
70
Loughlin
Avenue
Cos
Cob,
Conn.
06807
BRIAN
S.
METCALF,
’63,
is
working
in
forest
insect
&
dis
ease
control
with
the
New
York
State
Environmental
Conservation
Dept,
in
Canton.
Address:
R.
D.
#2
Dekalb
Jet.,
N.Y.
13630
FREDERICK
G.
OTTO,
’66,
is
presently
associated
with
the
Wil
seam
Ent.
Restaurant
chain
as
the
manager
of
the
Hungry
Farmer
Restaurant
at
6925
W.
Alameda
in
Lakewood,
Colorado.
Address:
7570
W.
Amherst,
Apt.
3C
Denver,
Colorado
80227
JOHN
C.
DeFOREST,
’66,
is
surveying
with
Sear
-
Brown
-
Schoenberger-Costich
&
Maletta.
Address:
726
Chamber
Street
Spencerport,
New
York
14559
JAMES
SCHAEFFER,
’68,
in
March,
was
appointed
manager
of
the
Wellshire
Inn
located
in
Den
ver,
Colorado
80222.
He
was
the
former
manager
of
the
Branding
Iron
Restaurant
in
Finksburg,
Maryland.
(Continued
on
page
3)
Students
work
on
the
Alumni
Park
pool.
Roger
W
.
Tubby
Director
Of
Development
Roger
W.
Tubby,
former
U.
S.
Ambassador
and
White
House
Press
Secretary,
is
joining
the
staff
of
Paul
Smith’s
College
as
Director
of
Development.
His
re
tirement
from
service
with
the
De
partment
of
State
is
effective
June
30,
and
he
will
return
immediately
to
Saranac
Lake.
This
announce
ment
was
made
by
Dr.
Chester
L.
Buxton,
President
of
the
College.
Mr.
Tubby
is
presently
deputy
to
the
Director
of
the
Foreign
Service
Institute,
Department
of
State,
Washington.
Prior
to
this
assignment
he
served
seven
and
one-half
years
as
Ambassador
to
the
international
organizations
in
Geneva.
He
was
Press
Secretary
to
President
Truman
and
Assistant
Secretary
for
Public
Affairs
under
President
Kennedy.
He
has
had
a
long
connection
with
the
Adirondacks
as
co-pub-
lisher
and
editor
for
seventeen
years
of
the
Adirondack
Daily
En
terprise
in
Saranac
Lake.
Together
with
James
Loeb
he
bought
the
Enterprise
in
Saranac
Lake
in
June
1953
and
later
the
Lake
Placid
News,
selling
both
papers
to
Wil
liam
Doolittle
in
December
1970.
He
was
on
the
Paul
Smith’s
Col
lege
faculty
1958-60.
Mr.
Tubby
was
founder
and
lat
er
President
of
the
Adirondack
Park
Association;
Chairman
of
the
Adirondack
Northway
Committee;
Adirondack
member
of
the
New
York
Legislative
Advisory
Com
mittee
on
Natural
Resources
and,
since
1955,
member
of
the
Board
of
Trustees
of
the
Trudeau
Insti
tute
for
Medical
Research
at
Sara
nac
Lake.
A
1958
proposal
of
his
to
the
New
York
Section
of
the
Society
of
American
Foresters
at
Albany
was
one
of
the
principal
catalysts
leading
to
the
creation
of
the
Adi
rondack
Park
Agency.
He
called
then
for
forest
management
and
zoning
of
the
Adirondack
and
Cat-
skill
Forest
Preserves.
Mr.
Tubby,
a
graduate
of
Yale,
1933,
studied
at
the
London
School
Economics,
worked
for
several
months
for
the
governor
of
a
Mex
ican
state,
and
for
five
years
was
reporter,
then
editor,
of
the
Ben
nington,
Vermont,
Banner,
before
joining
the
staff
of
the
Board
of
Economic
Warfare
during
World
War
Two.
He
is
a
member
of
the
Academy
of
Political
and
Social
Srience,
the
American
Foreign
Service
Association,
and
the
Unit-
eJ
Nations
Association.
Roger
and
Anne
Tubby
have
a
home
on
Trudeau
Road,
Saranac
Lake.
Their
oldest
daughter,
Dr.
Suzanne
Batra,
her
husband,
Dr.
Lekh
Batra,
and
two
children,
and
their
second
daughter,
Jean
Pren
tiss
Sherwood,
her
husband,
Rich
ard,
and
son,
all
live
near
Wash
ington.
Roger
Peter
Tubby
and
family
live
in
Lawrence,
Kansas.
Brenda
Tubby,
born
in
Saranac
Lake,
en
ters
Middlebury
College
this
fall.