
Published by: the Office of Special Services at: Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa 50112
Editorial Note: Addenda are not included as part of the on-line Campus Memo.
All copy must be submitted: in writing: by 3 p.m. Friday, via e-mail: by 9 a.m. Monday prior to Tuesday publication. E-mail address: Tindallk@admin.grin.edu Individual or office must be identified with all copy. Limit copy to 65 words.
This week's Scholars' Convocation, Nationalism in Northern Ireland and the Politics of Recognition, will be presented at 11:00 a.m., Thursday, September 17, in Herrick Chapel, by Professor John McGarry, Department of Political Science, Kings College, Ontario. This talk in part of the symposium on Conflict Resolution in Northern Ireland, sponsored by the Rosenfield Program in Public Affairs, International Relations and Human Rights.
Professor McGarry holds both Irish and Canadian citizenship. He received his B.A. from Trinity College, Dublin and his Ph.D. from the University of Western Ontario. He is the author, coauthor or editor of several books on Northern Ireland, including The Politics of Ethnic Conflict Regulation (1993) and The Future of Northern Ireland (1990). He also has authored many articles on ethnic conflict and on Northern Ireland in scholarly journals. He and Dr. Brendan O'Leary of the London School of Economics received a major grant from the U.S. Institute for Peace in 1997 for their research. They are currently putting the finishing touches on a book they are writing on Transforming the Ulster Constabulary: Constructive Proposals. McGarry and O'Leary are working on another book on Managing Ethnic Conflict, which will be published in 1999.
The Rosenfield Program in Public Affairs, International Relations and Human Rights will sponsor a major symposium on Conflict Resolution in Northern Ireland, Tuesday, September 15 through Thursday, September 17, 1998. Speakers representing the major nationalist and unionist parties, and the Northern Ireland Women's Coalition will give their perspectives on the current situation in Northern Ireland, the 1988 Good Friday agreement and the prospects for lasting peace. The program for the symposium appears as an addendum to this week's Campus Memo. Everyone is cordially invited to attend. Books on the conflict in Northern Ireland are on reserve in Burling library. More information on Northern Ireland is available at the following web sites: http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/index.html (a comprehensive collection of materials concerning the Troubles); www.sinnfein.ie (Sinn Fein); www.pitt.edu/~novosel/northern.html (Northern Ireland Women's Coalition; www.dup.org.uk (Democratic Unionist Party); www.uup.org (Ulster Unionist Party); and www.sdlp.ie/sdlp/ (SDLP).
On Wednesday, Sept. 16 at 4:30 p.m. in Noyce Science Center 2023, Steve Langerud will present, Job, Grad School or Home with the Folks. If you know you are a Chemistry major/minor, but you don't know what you'll do with your degree after graduation, this seminar is for you! Visit with Steve Langerud from the GC Career Development Office this Wednesday, September 16th and come to his presentation at 4:30 p.m. Enjoy cookies and get all your questions answered!
On Monday, September 21, at 8:00 p.m. in the Forum South Lounge, Frank Conroy, Director of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, will speak and read from his fiction. Mr. Conroy, author of Stop Time and Midair, is presently teaching a three-week short course in fiction writing in the Grinnell English Department. He has trained many of the writers who study in the M.F.A. program at the University of Iowa, and last time he visited Grinnell he began his reading by playing a piece on the South Lounge piano. Refreshments will be served. For more information contact Saadi Simawe (English department) or Paula Smith (Associate Deans' Office).
On Friday September 18, at 4:15 p.m. in ARH 102, Professor Salikoko Mufwene, Professor of Linguistics and Chair of the Linguistics Department of the University of Chicago, will give a lecture entitled, Ebonics: When Ethnicity Is Rated Over Global History. In the mid-90s, the School Board of the City of Oakland generated intense controversy when it decided to treat so-called Ebonics, also known as "African-American vernacular English," as a distinct language in its own right. Professor Mufwene's talk will attempt to shed light on some of the issues involved, by bringing tools from the study of Linguistics to bear on these issues. As always, refreshments will be served. (This talk is sponsored by the Linguistics Concentration.)
Today, Tuesday, Sept. 15 at 4:15 p.m. in Noyce Science Center 2400, Jenny Heppner `99 will present her discoveries about Trapezoids With Integer Sides. Ms. Heppner worked with Prof. Jepsen this last summer at Grinnell, so if you've ever wondered what mathematical research is all about, treat yourself to a fun math talk! CHIPSANDSALLSAANDMORE!!!!!!
A schedule of Noun Program Activities is an addendum to the Campus Memo.
On Tuesday, Sept. 22 at 11 a.m. in Noyce Science Center 1023, Ellery Frahm '99 will present a lecture about Pion Absorption Cross Sections Of Heavy Nuclei. The lecture is sponsored by the Physics Department. Frahm, who is majoring in physics, conducted research with the Nuclear Theory Group at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, this summer. The researchers created computer models to follow the motion of subatomic particles called pions and to calculate absorption rates. Their research supports their theoretical model.
On Tuesday, September 22, at 4:15 p.m., in ARH 224, in a talk entitled, Teen Voices: the Alternative To Destructive Youth-focused Media, Kate Kerr `99 will demonstrate how one magazine tackles exploitative, market-based media. As part of a summer internship, Kate worked with a non-profit organization that produced an alternative teen magazine. Instead of selling products, this magazine worked to increase social and economic justice by spreading ideas nationally through a literary forum. Come hear about a teen magazine that addresses a number of serious, social issues that affect all young people.
On Friday, Sept. 18 at noon in Alumni House Conference Room, 1102 Broad St., Lisa Hetzel '00, recipient of a 1998 Wilson Summer Internship Grant, will discuss her summer internship experience in social service administration. The title of her presentation is Are We a Learning Organization? She will examine the leadership structure she found at a Chicago non-profit agency.
Latcho Drom (dir. Tony Gatlif, 1993); in various languages with occasional English subtitles; 103 minutes; color. Friday and Saturday at 8 p.m., Sunday at 2 p.m., ARH 302.
Latcho Drom, which means "safe journey" has no cast and no dialogue. Through song and dance, this documentary tells the story of the migration of the Gypsies across Asia and Europe. The director, Gatlif, uses Gypsy musicians from seven countries (India, Egypt, Turkey, Romania, Hungary, France, and Spain) to document the historical persecution of the Gypsies and to evidence the cultural heritage of these people who have always defied national borders. The film offers a sensory banquet of colorful costumes, lively dancers, and emotional songs that give a portrait of a people historically reviled and now almost forgotten.
The Department of Music will present a recital by fortepianist Susanne Skyrm on Thursday, September 24, at 8 p.m. in Herrick Chapel. Skyrm will perform works by Albero, Clementi, Haydn, Larranaga, Nebra, Scarlatti, Silva, and Soler. Skyrm is associate professor of music at the University of South Dakota, where she teaches piano, class piano and related subjects. She received her bachelor's degree in music from Albertson College, Idaho, and earned an M.M. degree in piano performance from the University of Cincinnati. She earned a D.M.A. degree in piano performance from the University of Colorado. She studied with Ilonka Deckers-Kuszler in Milan, Italy, for a number of years. She has performed in master classes with Gyorgy Sebok, Menahem Pressler and Ann Schein.
Skyrm has given recitals throughout the United States and Europe. She has a special interest in Iberian keyboard music of the eighteenth century. She gave the modern-day debut performance of a rare Portuguese fortepiano made by Manuel Antunes in 1767. A CD of eighteenth-century Iberian keyboard music that she recorded on the Antunes fortepiano was recently released on the Music & Arts label. Skyrm is a founding member of The Dakota Baroque and Classic Company, a touring ensemble which performs on authentic, commissioned copies of original instruments.
Wednesday, September 23, United Church of Christ-Congregational, 8 p.m.: Concert by the Finnish Choir Sekakuoro Kulkuset.
Thursday, September 24, Herrick Chapel, 4:30 p.m.: Choral Workshop conducted by the Finnish Choir Sekakuoro Kulkuset.
Sunday, September 27, Herrick Chapel, 3 p.m.: Faculty Recital by Nancy McFarland Gaub, violin, and Eugene Gaub, piano Beethoven Chamber Music Series, Concert I.
Showing at 10 p.m., Thursday, Sept. 17th at the French House, 1130 East: Jules and Jim, adaptation of a novel by Henri-Pierri Roche, directed by Francois Truffaut, 1961, black & white, 100 min, with subtitles. With her love for both Jules and Jim, Jeanne Moreau is the tragic center of cinema's most celebrated menage-a-trois.
Driving Dysfunction: Doo-Dads by Durang, the first Theatre Department Open Space Production of the semester, will be performed at Bob's Underground Sept. 25-27 at 6:00 p.m. This collection of Christopher Durang shorts presents a hodgepodge of humor and absurdity with a pinch of neuroses and a dash of the deranged. Tickets can be reserved by e-mailing [rice] or calling x3262.
Made in 1991 on a $20,000 dollar budget, Slacker, a mixture of offbeat comedy and sociological insight, is already regarded as a cult classic. Like many cult classics, it defines its own world, in this case, the raffish subculture that forms on the fringes of a large college campus: an assortment of aging young people, disconnected, seldom employed, combining 1960's idealism and everything-for-sale anomie with a yearning for change as the century winds down. The film examines some 100 of these `slackers'. The New York Times said, "No other movie has delivered such a moving perception of the unpredictable mood of America as it lurches toward the millennium." Thursday September 17, 9:15 p.m., Harris97 min.
Next weeks film: A Tickle in the Heart-a celebration of Klezmer music.
Submit Interlibrary Loan Requests Electronically
You may now enter interlibrary loan requests electronically catalog (INNOPAC). Select option X>INTERLIBRARY LOAN REQUESTS from the main menu and complete the request form. Remember to type carefully and provide complete information for each item. For more information contact Russ Motta (ext. 3005) or Catherine Rod (ext. 4431).
Library Lab
Library Lab is an individual research appointment initiated by the student (or other Grinnell campus member) to pursue research on
a
specific topic. Contact a reference librarian and set up an appointment. For more information on Library Lab, go to the Grinnell
College Libraries WWW home page at http://www.lib.grin.edu/services/liblab.html
Library Reserves
Students using reserve materials in Burling or Windsor Science Libraries are reminded that overdue fines accrue quickly when the items are overdue. To ensure that materials you check out are immediately checked in, you should return them to the desk and not put them in the book drop during the hours the libraries are open.
Library Notices Sent Via E-Mail
Grinnell College Libraries notices regarding Interlibrary Loan and Circulation are sent to the campus community via e-mail. Please check your account daily for messages about the arrival of Interlibrary Loan items, overdue items, and recalls and holds. If you have any questions, please see a reference librarian.
Windsor Science Library
The Windsor Science Library, in the Noyce Science Center, is open as follows:
1-5 p.m. and 7-11 p.m. on Sunday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and 7-11 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday, 1-5 p.m. on Saturday.
Reference service is available from 1:30-4:15 p.m. Monday through Thursday, or by contacting Gail Bonath (bonath@ac.grin.edu; x3358).
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Christian Worship: Sunday, September 20 (10:30 a.m.) Inter-denominational Worship Service in Herrick Chapel; Rev. Deanna Shorb, Chaplain, will be preaching; Dr. Marlys Boote, College Organist, will be accompanist.
Jewish Programs
- Chalutzim will meet on Friday, Sept. 18th at 12 Noon in the conference room at 1127 Park Street, don't forget to bring your lunch.
- Shabbat table this Friday, Sept. 18th at 6:30 p.m. in the Chalutzim Lounge, Cowles 1st floor, south side. Reservations are very helpful, please e-mail [CHALUTZ@ac.grin.edu].
- High Holy Day Schedule:
Sunday, September 20th: Erev Rosh HaShanah Dinner at 6:30 p.m., Chalutzim Lounge; Erev Rosh HaShanah Services at 8:00 p.m., Main Lounge.
Monday, September 21st: Rosh HaShanah Morning Services at 10:00 a.m., Main Lounge; Rosh HaShanah Afternoon trip to Rock Creek, time to be announced.
Tuesday, September 29th: Erev Yom Kippur Dinner at 6:30 p.m., Chalutzim Lounge; Kol Nidre Services at 8:00 p.m., Main Lounge.
Wednesday, September 30th: Yom Kippur Morning Services at 10:00 a.m., Main Lounge; Yom Kippur Afternoon Services 3:00 p.m., Main Lounge Yizkor Services, Main Lounge; Closing Services, Main Lounge Break-Fast at 6:30 p.m., Chalutzim Lounge.
Study With the Chaplains
Tuesday, *today*, Sept. 15th , 4:15 - 5:15 p.m. in the conference room at 1127 Park Street. We are studying Apocryphal Literature, beginning with the book of Tobit.
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City-league volleyball season starts Sept. 28. The college sponsors a women's team, the Wapentakes. We likely will play
Monday nights; most matches last about a 1/2 hour. Interested women faculty, staff, students, and their friends should contact Janet
Gibson
(gibsonj; 3168). Our web page is: http://www.grinnell.edu/individuals/gibsonj/volleyball.html.
Grinnell is hosting the 36th Annual Les Duke Cross Country Meet this Saturday, Sept. 19, at Oakland Acres Golf Course. Race times are 10:00 a.m. for women and 10:45 a.m. for men. A shuttle school bus will take athletes, officials and spectators to the course on the 1/2 hour starting at 8:00 a.m. The bus will depart from the PEC 10th Ave. and will return you back to campus upon completion of the races. We also invite any faculty, staff, alumni or community runners to participate in the open division. If interested please register by call X3810 or X3812.
Are you within a year or two of a round-number birthday? I'm looking for people just turning 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90 (or more!) who would be willing to take part on a panel for my tutorial class on "Understanding the Process of Aging." We'd like to know what that birthday has meant to you. Contact Kent McClelland at X3134, 236-7002, or MCCLEL on the VAX.
Lost: A red Hello Kitty wallet. Last seen at the Down Under Pub on Friday night, 9/4/98. If you know of its whereabouts or could return it, I would be very happy. No questions asked. [westman] 236-6727, box 14-83.
Found: a bike. Call x3678 to describe and claim it.
Found: a silver bracelet with round beads, each containing a different colored stone. If you are missing it, e-mail [johnson2].
Found in Steiner 306: A sport watch. Please describe to claim in the Steiner Secretaries office (Steiner 209).
Latin Sight-Reading Group commences this week with a reading of Einhard's, Life of Charlemagne. This Thursday, 8:00 p.m., at the McKibbens', 916 Seventh Avenue. Refreshments.
Models are needed for life drawing classes, Art Department. If you are interested, please contact Bobbie McKibbin at her e-mail address or call ext. #3080. Studio classes meet Monday-Thursday afternoons 1:15-4:00 p.m. and Tuesday & Thursday morning 8:00-11:00 a.m.
Do you have shelves of old board games that are just sitting around collecting dust in the basement? How `bout half-used art supplies, old crayons, markers and coloring books that pale in comparison to the nicer ones you just bought yourself? Bob's Underground is looking to restock and replenish its collection of board games and art supplies and would love your old stuff. If you are interested in donating, please contact [java] and arrangements can be made.
The inauguration of Russell K. Osgood as the twelfth president of Grinnell College will take place on Saturday, October 10, 1998 at 2:00 p.m. on Central Campus.
The inauguration ceremony will be preceded by a symposium on Opportunities for Research in the Liberal Arts. The symposium will highlight faculty and student panels, presentations and displays (from all divisions), and feature a plenary session by Trustee and Nobel Laureate Tom Cech '70. Between the symposium and the inauguration ceremony, an all-campus picnic lunch will be served on South Campus.
Details will be released as they are finalized in the coming weeks. Questions should be addressed to the Office of Public Relations.
The Campus Security Report is an addendum to the Campus Memo.
Please remember to contact Kathy Tindall, if you do not plan to participate in the inauguration ceremony on Saturday, October 10. The deadline for your RSVP response to the official invitation has been extended to Thursday, September 17.
The Seventh Annual Science Student Research Symposium has been scheduled for 10 a.m.-12 noon on Saturday, Oct. 3 during Family Weekend. If you have conducted or been involved in a research project at Grinnell College or elsewhere during the academic year or during the summer, you should consider sharing your experience with your fellow students, faculty and administrators, and family visitors. If you have nothing to present, mark your calendar and plan on attending to learn what your colleagues have done.
For more information or to "register" a poster, please obtain a form from the Science Secretaries' Office or any science faculty member, and submit it to Valerie Mckee in the Science Division Office, Noyce 1232, by Monday, Sept. 21.
Fall break plans, anyone? On Tuesday, Sept. 22 at 8 p.m. in North Lounge come hear about this fall's Alternative Break Trips and pick up an application. The Alternative Break Program is a student-run organization dedicated to providing students with the opportunity to travel as members of an intentional community of service to experience new perspectives, develop leadership skills, and practice cooperation through educational and hands-on community service during break. Questions? E-mail [ALTBREAK].
Coro Fellows Program in Public Affairs
The Coro Fellows Program has openings at four sites (St, Louis, New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles). The Fellows Program is a 9 month graduate level program in public affairs. Each fellow participates in intensive training for leadership in the public arena. Fellows work in the following areas; a business, non-profit, media organization, government, labor union, and a political campaign. Qualifications: a college degree, commitment to public service, and a willingness to work hard. Stipends are available based on demonstrated financial need. Deadline to apply: February 5, 1999. Please contact Liza Cohen, Coro Midwestern Center, 1730 South 11th Street, Suite 102, St. Louis, MO 63104 or call (314)621-3040. You can find out more about Coro at www.coro.org
IPCCC Deadline Approaches
The Iowa Private College Career Consortium (IPCCC) will be collecting resumes for its first round of interviews being held this fall. The CDO has information on the positions and the companies which plan to participate in this event. Resumes and cover letters will be due in the CDO by Wednesday, September 23, 1998.
GRE Registrations Due September 18
Grinnell is scheduled as a test site for the November 7 paper-based testing of the GRE. Registration materials are available in the CDO and are due to be received at ETS by September 18, 1998.
Music Business Internship
The Red Hot Organization, the world's leading AIDS fighting organization in the entertainment industry, is looking for college representatives for the fall 1998 semester. Fight AIDS through popular culture while working with excellent music and gaining experience in the music business. For more information, contact reps@redhot.org or check out www.redhot.org.
Census Jobs
The U.S. Bureau of the Census has full-time and part-time job opportunities in Poweshiek county. A pre-employment test is required and if enough students are interested the test could be administered on campus. Interested students should contact Becky Wallace in the Career Development Office at x4940.
Part-time Local Jobs
Donaldson Company is looking for at least two individuals to help with clerical duties. These individuals should have some computer, Excel, Windows 95 experience. Duties would be varied but would be working in the scheduling department, quality control department and human resources department. Donaldson's also has two computer programming positions open (complete job descriptions available in the CDO).
All four positions are available immediately. Flexible hours. Send a resume to: Donaldson Company, Attn: Linda Harbin, 201 East Street South, Grinnell, IA 50112 or FAX at 515-236-8511.
Resume Deadline
Resumes & covers letters are due in the CDO on Friday, September 18 for positions available with Cerner Corporation. Cerner is accepting resumes for the positions of System Analyst, Application Specialist and Application Developer. Stop by the CDO to review the specific job descriptions.
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Students will be allowed to draw Cash Advances on their October 10, 1998 paychecks beginning the week of September 14 - 18. Students need to have their supervisors document their hours and rate of pay and bring the information to the Office of the Treasurer, Student Receivable Section, to receive their cash advance.
Chalutzim will sponsor a study break at 8 p.m. in the Chalutzim lounge (by Cowles dining hall) on Wednesday, September 16, to allow everyone to get acquainted before High Holidays. Food, drinks, and games will be provided. All are welcome, especially those considering participating in Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah services. Please e-mail [Chalutz] with any questions. Hope to see you there!
The 99 Cyclone staff is seeking people for the following positions:
Editors-in-chief (2) Photographers (4) Layout Artist Section Editors (4)
Experience in a newer version of Adobe Photoshop is recommended but not required (we use Adobe Photoshop 6.5). E-mail our account [CYCLONE], express your interest in a specific job, and we will set up an interview some time this week! The Cyclone office is located in the Student Publications Building on South Campus, x3323.
A required information meeting is scheduled for Tuesday, September 22 at 7:00 p.m. in Noyce Science Center 2022. We will announce HPAC events planned for this academic year, discuss the admission process for various health programs, and talk about resources available during the different phases of the application process. We will also update the HPAC database. First year students do not need to attend. Questions? Contact [mahlab], or [sullivac].
The Freehand Press, the college's quarterly literary magazine, is seeking submissions for its fall issue. Any students wanting to submit poetry, prose, art, or photos can send their works to box 14-08. The deadline for submissions is Friday, September 18. Please note the correction of the date. Anyone with questions may direct them to [freehand], or to Janann [dawkins] or Jennifer [stob].
Want to make Freehand better? Join the submissions committee! This is a non-paid position but is invaluable for the magazine. Committee members never meet; they judge works individually. Their votes on each piece really make a difference! The more students on the committee, the more the works in Freehand reflect the literary tastes on campus. Please e-mail [freehand] if interested. All are welcome!
Sailing Trip
Want to get off campus and go sailing? There will be a short sailing trip out at Rock Creek this Friday from 3:30-5 p.m. For more information contact Dave Zeiss @admin.grin.edu.
Maquoketa Caves
There will be a caving trip out to Maquoketa Caves this weekend. Sign up at the Forum Desk, the cost is $5. Limited Space available.
Rock Creek Boating and Sailing
The boating trip that was originally planned for Sept. 5th, has been moved to Sept. 19th. There will be space for 8 people to ride out in the van, and 8 people to bike out and back. This is a great chance to spend some time outside in the sun!! Sign up at the Forum Desk, cost is $2.
Canoeing and Climbing Trip
The canoeing and climbing trip that was scheduled for Sept. 26th, has been rescheduled for October 3rd. This trip will take people out to Palisades-Keppler for a day of climbing or canoeing. Sign up at the Forum Desk (sheet available Sept. 23rd). Cost is $5.
To join the GORP mailing list e-mail GORP with your username and class year.
Students interested in programs of study in Russia and Central and Eastern Europe and in summer language study in the United States are invited to an information meeting on Friday, September 18, at 4:15 p.m. in ARH 227. Past participants in such programs and faculty program advisors will be on hand to share their experiences and to answer questions.
Tired of not being able to leave Grinnell already? Travel to the splendors of Iowa City next Sunday. The first SGA shuttle of the year will leave Sunday, September 27, at 11:00 a.m. and arrive back in Grinnell by 5:30 p.m. The cost is a paltry $8. Sign up is at the forum desk on a first-come, first- served basis.
Are you interested in children's theatre, library storytimes, reading programs, and other celebrations of literacy? Are you interested in planning such activities for the Grinnell community? If so, please attend the first meeting of the CSC's Literacy Committee in PDR E in the Forum basement on Friday, September 18, at 4:15 p.m. Please attend with ideas, suggestions, and enthusiasm for this year's programs!
Anyone interested in swimming, whether competitively or for fitness, is welcome. Currently, practices are Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 6 a.m. to 7 a.m. If you are interested, but the noon hour or evenings fit into your schedule better, contact me and we can arrange other practice times as well. For scheduling or any other questions, call Jim at 236-0018 or e-mail [RANDALL@AC.GRIN.EDU].
The swim team meeting that was scheduled for Sept. 9th, has been rescheduled for Wed. Sept. 16th at 4:30 p.m., in the Cub's room of the PEC. If you are interested in joining the team this year, please come to this meeting. For more information, e-mail [HURLEY].
ResNet users in need of assistance will now have another avenue of support, the ResNet HelpDesk. You may call the new ResNet HelpDesk from 6-9 p.m. Monday -Thursday at ext. 3059. The ResNet HelpDesk can be used to assist in configuration problems, setting up e-mail, using ftp to access NT storage, as well as other ResNet problems. Please see the ResNet web page at http://www.grinnell.edu/resnet for more details on this support option, as well as additional avenues of support to assist you in making the most of your connection. If you haven't gotten connected yet, the ResNet web page will also give you information on how to get connected.
If you do not want your e-mail address searchable over the Internet by off-campus users, please send a e-mail message to STUDWEB@ac.grin.edu by Friday September 18th. For further information please see http://www.grinnell.edu/www/address-rules.html
The Career Development Office is pleased to announce its upcoming Graduate School Fair, to be held on Tuesday, September 22. This event will take place in North Lounge of the Forum from 9:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. on the 22nd. Plan to stop by and pick up materials or visit with representatives from a wide variety of graduate school programs.
If you are interested in diving on the Men's and Women's Swimming and Diving Team, please come to the informational meeting scheduled for Wed., Sept. 16th at 4:30 p.m. in the Cub's room of the PEC. Those with prior gymnastics and/or dance experience are especially encouraged to attend. For more informations, please contact [HURLEY]
The following vehicles are not registered with the college, have received 3 or more tickets and are subject to immediate tow/immobilization.
Lic#: CA 4BYF124 Ford Lic#: IL KD7359 Dodge Lic#: OH ARP9230 VW Jetta Lic#: WI TAE836 Oldsmobile
All juniors seriously interested in a career in public service should consider applying for the Harry S. Truman Scholarship. Truman Scholarships are awarded nationally to 80 students in recognition of outstanding leadership potential, academic achievement, and the desire to pursue a career in government or elsewhere in public service. Applicants must be U.S. citizens. The scholarship awards up to $30,000 for tuition, fees, books, and room and board to juniors to complete their undergraduate degree and for two years of graduate school. Funding has gone to pursue training in diverse fields including, but not limited to, agriculture, economics, engineering, history, law, political science, public administration, public health, and science.
The college may nominate from three to four students for this award. Application materials are available from Angie Story-Johnson in the Associate Deans Office (Nollen 3, x3460) or Jack Mutti, (Carnegie 204, x3143). Faculty who know of good candidates should encourage them to apply. On campus deadline for applications: Friday, November 13, 1998.