Campus Memo

September 23, 1997


Campus Memo

Campus

Memo

Scholars' Convocation, 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 25, in Harris Cinema

This week's Scholars' Convocation, Looking for Reality in a Culture of Images: Race, Gender and the O.J. Simpson Trial, will be presented at 11 a.m. Thursday, Sept. 25, in Harris Cinema by philosopher Susan Bordo. She is the Otis A. Singletary Chair in the Humanities at the University of Kentucky and professor of philosophy.

Her book Unbearable Weight: Feminism, Western Culture and the Body (University of California Press, 1993) was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and named one of the Notable Books of 1993 by the New York Times. Bordo's latest collection of essays, Twilight Zones: The Hidden Life of Cultural Images from Plato to O.J., was published this fall by the University of California Press. It includes essays on cosmetic surgery, the O.J. Simpson case, sexual harassment and the Anita Hill/Clarence Thomas controversy, eating disorders and images of men's and women's bodies in contemporary films and the media.

Bordo received her Ph.D. in philosophy from the State University of New York at Stony Brook. She has received several national fellowships including a Rockefeller Fellowship and an American Council of Learned Societies/Ford Foundation's Fellowships. Bordo's visit to Grinnell College is sponsored by the Philosophy Department, the Office of the President, the Louise R. Noun Program in Women's Studies, the Rosenfield Program in Public Affairs, International Relations and Human Rights, and the Gender and Women's Studies concentration.

Related Talks Include:

• On Tuesday, September 23, at 4:15 p.m. in ARH 302. Dr. Bordo will discuss issues related to eating disorders and the fashion industry in Never Just Pictures: The Hidden Life of Fashion.

• On Wednesday, September 24, at 8:00 p.m. in Harris Cinema, Dr. Bordo will address issues of sexual harassment in Can a Woman Harass a Man?

Noyce Science Center Dedication: 11:00 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 27, lawn west of Noyce Science Center (Herrick Chapel if inclement weather)

Gordon Moore, chairman emeritus of Intel, and Ann Bowers, Robert Noyce's widow, will be among the featured speakers at the Noyce Science Center dedication ceremony. The ceremony begins at 11:00 a.m. in front of the Noyce Science Center.

Gordon Moore co-founded Intel Corporation with Robert Noyce '49 in 1968. Dr. Moore received his Ph.D. in chemistry and physics from the California Institute of Technology. He worked with William Shockley, co-inventor of the transistor, before co-founding Fairchild Semiconductor. Fairchild produced the first commercial integrated circuit. Personal computers all over the world bear the slogan "Intel Inside," using technology that grew from the work of Grinnell College alumnus, Robert N. Noyce, the co-inventor of the semiconductor chip, and Gordon Moore. Noyce, a Grinnell trustee and alumnus, died in 1990.

Ann S. Bowers Noyce is the senior Trustee of the Noyce Foundation, a non-profit foundation created to stimulate a system-wide improvement in K-12 public schools and on The Board of The Silicon Valley Joint Venture Education Initiative. She was the first Director of Personnel for Intel Corporation and the first Vice-President of Human Resources for Apple Computer.

September 23, 1997

Volume XXVII, No. 5

Contents

Scholars Convocation ................... 1

Announcements

Academic ................................. 2

Cultural .................................... 3

All--Campus ............................. 4

Faculty/Staff .............................. 5

Students ..................................... 5

Academic Awards/Scholarships/

Internships/Grants ......................... 6

Published by

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Grinnell College, Grinnell, Iowa 50112

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Individual or office must be identified with all copy. Limit copy to 65 words.

Noyce Center Dedication Continued:

• Dedication events begin at 9:30 a.m. when participants are invited to tour the $15.3 million facility, review science research conducted by Grinnell students and faculty, and participate in hands-on lab experiments in the building's new research classrooms and laboratories.

Picnic: An all-campus picnic follows the dedication ceremony on central campus (rain site: Darby Gym). Dining halls will be closed for lunch.


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Academic Announcements

Alejandro Funes speaks about Nueva Esperanza and GAP

Alejandro Funes, a community leader from Nueva Esperanza, Guatemala, will speak about living in Nueva Esperanza on Thursday, Sept. 25 at 8 p.m. in South Lounge. An informal discussion will be held at 4:15 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 25, in the Coffeehouse. The Guatemalan Accompaniment Project (GAP) was begun to secure accompaniers. Connie Vanderhyden, a native of Grinnell, formed a group in the Kickapoo Valley in Wisconsin. She and her niece, Holly Pfitsch, a 1996 graduate of Grinnell College, were accompaniers during the past year in a new community of returned refugees in the northwest corner of Guatemala, Nueva Esperanza. Vanderhyden and Pfitsch are actively involved with the Kickapoo Valley GAP. Together with a sponsoring group from Central College in Pella, the Wisconsin groups is funding two accompaniers who will be in Nueva Esperanza beginning this month. Vanderhyden is the daughter of John and Emily Pfitsch, and Holly Pfitsch is their granddaughter.

Brent Metz, Grinnell College assistant professor of anthropology, will be the interpreter for Funes. Funes' visit to Grinnell is sponsored by the Rosenfield Program in Public Affairs, International Relations and Human Rights, the Latin American Studies Program, and the Grinnell United Church of Christ Congregational.

Biology Department Seminar.

On Wednesday, September 24, the following students will present results of their research projects: Andy Broadwell '98 Expression of mRNAs Encoding Regulators of G Protein Signaling in the Developing and Adult Mouse and Katlin Mohr '98 Limitations of Sexual Selection: A Reexamination of Female Choice in the Fruit Fly Drosophilia Melanogaster. The lectures will begin at 4:30 p.m. in Science 2021. Refreshments will be served at 4:15 p.m. in Science 1021.

Chemistry Seminar

Wednesday, Sept. 24, 7:30 p.m., Sci. 2022. Robert West from the Chemistry Department of the University of Wisconsin-Madison will speak on the topic The Nobel Fullerenes. A highlight of the talk will be the research efforts of the West group to prepare silafullerenes which incorporate silicon atoms into the carbon based fullerenes. Professor West will be accompanied by current graduate student, David Moline, and post-doctoral researcher, Julian Koe. Students will have an opportunity to meet with all three at a coffee hour on Wednesday at 5 p.m. in Science 2024 (with cookies!). Come hear about chemistry career opportunities from all academic perspectives. Additionally students may sign up to have dinner with the visitors on Wednesday evening. The sign-up sheet will be posted with the seminar information.

CIEE Program in Chile

On Wed., Sept. 24 at 4:15 p.m. in ARH 224, Megan Barry, Chris de Beer and Brian Wagner will talk about and answer questions about their off-campus experience in the CIEE program in Chile. All are welcome to attend and refreshments will be served.

Math/CS Journal Club

Our next meeting is Thursday, September 25. Catherine Williams '99 will speak on Interpoint Distances in an Equisum Hexagon. This talk will present results obtained in a research project this summer under the direction of Prof. Charles Jepsen. Continuing custom, chips, salsa, fignewtons, etc. will be served in the Math/CS Lounge (2400) at 4:15 p.m. with the presentation in the Math/CS Seminar Room (2413) at 4:30 p.m.

Physicist Geoffrey West: Two talks

Fun with Size and Scale: From Elephants and Quarks to the Evolution of the Universe, will be presented at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Sept. 29, in Science 2022. This talk is for a general audience. For example, "if it takes a quart and a half of paint to cover a floor 10 feet on a side, how much will it take to paint a square floor 20 feet on a side? If you answer `four times as

much or six quarts,' you've just completed a mathematical process called `scaling.'" He will offer many insights in physics, chemistry, biology and medicine, and wide-ranging applications of scaling.

The Origin of Universal Scaling Laws in Biology: The Physics of the Cardiovascular, Respiratory and Plant Vascular Systems will be presented at 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, Sept. 30, in Science 1023. In this lecture, he will present a more detailed discussion of particular examples of scaling in biology.

Geoffrey West, an internationally known particle theorist at the Los Alamos National Laboratory and an expert in scaling, is program manager for high energy at the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He served as group leader of the lab's elementary particle physics and field theory group from 1974-81 and from 1989-1995. He was made a fellow of the laboratory in 1982. He is the author of several papers including "Scaling in Deep Inelastic Electropion Production," which was published in the journal, Physics Review, and "A General Model for the Origin of Allometric Scaling Laws in Biology," which was published in the journal, Science.

This lecture is the first Harold W. '38 and Jean Ryan '38 Squire Lecture in Physics. Harold Squire, a 1938 Grinnell College alumnus and chairman of the board of Squire Heating Supply in Columbus, Ohio, has funded the lectureship.

Women, Refugees, and Development in Africa

Come, eat cookies, and listen to two Global Development Studies Concentration student project presentations on Thursday, September 25 at 7 p.m. in ARH 224. Elizabeth Welch will discuss her grant-writing and other volunteer activities at a Namibian women's center in a talk entitled, Grass Roots Development and Philanthropy in Namibia, and Melissa Bezanson will present Exploring the Tension Between the Local Turkana Community and 43,000 Refugees in Northern Kenya.


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mentation to a flute quartet to a piece for tape alone. And the diversity of styles is quite dazzling."

The Center for New Music was founded in 1966 with a seed grant from the Rockefeller Foundation. The Center promotes the performance of new music by providing a core group of specialists in contemporary performance techniques. Its programming has included world premieres as well as acknowledged contemporary masterworks. In 1986 the Center received the Commendation of Excellence from Broadcast Music, Inc., the world's largest performing rights organization.

Performing Arts Film - Mississippi Burning

Mississippi Burning is the story of James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Mickey Schwerner, the three college-age young men who "disappeared" while serving as voter-registration workers at the height of the Civil Rights movement in 1964.

As the FBI went in to investigate, the story spread throughout the nation, and people everywhere had their feelings aroused and their attention focused on the shocking circumstances. This incident, perhaps more than most Civil Rights incidents of the time, exposed the depth of the problems which stood in the way of the already-enacted Civil Rights law becoming reality.

The film will be given a brief introduction by Amanda Walker, who is a student in Professor Charles Payne's class on "The Civil Rights Movement In Mississippi." Thursday, September 25, 9:15 p.m., Harris Cinema. Next week's film: Secrets and Lies.

Theatre Mainstage Production

Sibling Species, the Theatre Department's first Mainstage production of the year, will be presented Oct. 2-5 in Arena Theatre, 8 p.m. Thurs.-Sat., with additional performances at 10 p.m. Friday and Saturday, 3 p.m. Sunday. Directed by Rachel Slavick, '81, guest alumna artist, this experimental theatre piece explores the theme of evolution. Seating is limited; ticket reservation information appears below.

Evolutionary science forces us to shift our perspective away from the search for a

meaning that separates humankind from all the rest of nature. If we honestly hope to understand evolution at all, we must, ultimately, lose "an antiquated concept of soul to gain a more humble, even exalting vision of our oneness with nature." While most people would probably admit that evolution does a fair job explaining our existence, few would go so far as to allow that it proves orchids and gall midges as much a miracle as we. In order to study nature we must give up our sense of control over the outcomes and follow where the adaptations lead, a balance must be struck between the "why" and the "because." In that way nature opens her store of knowledge to us, bit by bit. As Stephen Jay Gould puts it in The Panda's Thumb, "The best illustrations of adaptation by evolution are the ones that strike our intuition as peculiar or bizarre. Science is not `organized common sense'"; at its most exciting, it reformulates our view of the world by imposing powerful theories against the ancient, anthropocentric prejudices we call intuition."

Through movement, sound and scene improvisations over four weeks of rehearsal, the acting ensemble of Sibling Species has generated from Slavick's research a performance piece that explores the ways in which our journeys to become human are mirrored by the wondrous and bizarre adaptations of many different species.

Tickets for "Sibling Species" will be available by e-mail Monday, September 22 through noon on Friday, September 26. Please state the performance date and time that you would like to attend and the number of tickets you wish to reserve. Tickets may be reserved by e-mailing the [THEATRE] account located on the academic vax. Any messages received after noon on Friday will not be considered. The Theatre Box Office will be open Monday, September 29 through Friday, October 3 from 1:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. Performance times: Thursday, October 2, 8:00 p.m.; Friday, October 3, 7 & 9:00 p.m.; Saturday October 4, 7 & 9:00 p.m.; Sunday, October 5, 3:00 p.m.

Cultural Announcements

Cultural Film: The Funeral (Japan, 1984) in Japanese with subtitles in English, Color, 124 minutes

Director Juzo Itami's first feature film (Tampo, A Taxing Woman), The Funeral is a black comedy that pokes fun at solemn traditional Japanese funeral rites. Tsutomu Yamazaki plays a wealthy businessman, Wabisuke, who runs a company that makes television commercials. When his wife's father dies, his mother-in-law wants a traditional funeral ceremony to be held in Wabisuke's prosperous, suburban and Westernized home. The film comprises a series of misadventures as he and his wife, Chizuko, try to cope with each item on the mortuary's agenda. The Funeral is an inventive and clever comedy in which Wabisuke and Chizuko gradually learn to come to terms with death.

Iowa Composers Concert on Sunday

The Center for New Music from the University of Iowa School of Music will present a free concert of recent electronic and acoustic music by Iowa composers, at 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 28, in Herrick Chapel. The program features works of eight composers, all of them current faculty members at Iowa's colleges and universities.

Among the works to be performed are Grinnell composer Jonathan Chenette's "Fantasy and Fugue on BACH," a trio for violin, cello, and piano. Other works on the program include electronic and chamber music by composers from the University of Iowa, Iowa State University, the University of Northern Iowa, and Luther College.

Commenting on the program, Center for New Music director David Gompper notes that "this concert will show how strong the new music scene in Iowa is. It is also a reflection of the current diversity in musical composition, both in Iowa and globally, really. We will have everything from a traditional piano trio instru


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Music Next Week

• Saturday, October 4; Herrick Chapel; 2 p.m.: Family Weekend Student Recital by Melissa Roberts '99, violin; and Barbara Lien, piano.

• Saturday, October 4; Herrick Chapel; 7:30 p.m.: Family Weekend Concert — Music Department Ensembles; organized by John Rommereim.

All Campus Announcements

Aikido

Often referred to as "The Art of Harmony," Aikido is a self-defense martial art with roots in the samurai tradition, offering self-defense, aerobic exercise, and centering all in one. Classes are from 6-7:30 p.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays and are held in the Mat Room of the PEC. All levels of experience are welcome, so come watch or participate whenever you can! More info: jtauber@igc.org or call me, Jonas Tauber, at (319) 390-0535.

Art Reproduction Sale

Sept. 29 - Oct. 3: Judy Beck will return to Grinnell next week to hold her annual sale of art reproductions. This year she will be holding the sale at St. Paul's Episcopal Church, located at the corner of 6th Avenue and State Street. Times of the sale will be announced later. Call the Fine Arts Office, Ext. 3064, for more information.

Campus Writers Read at Bob's Tonight

The Freehand Press is sponsoring a reading at Bob's Underground tonight, Tuesday, September 23 at 9:30 p.m. (note: this time is a half hour later than previously advertised). Come hear students read poetry and prose of their own creation. If you have questions, e-mail [FREEHAND], otherwise come to Bob's tonight and expect an imagination-sparking and heart-pounding event. Support the writers!

no questions asked. We use the banner for activities on and off campus and it is extremely expensive to replace.

• Lost: I lost my watch! It's a black Casio sportswatch with a big turquoise button (for timing) on the front. Please call x4141 (leave a message!) or vax [changi] if you find it. Thanks! Ivy

• Lost: A set of keys on a ring with a red and purple bead alligator for a key chain. If found, please contact Jeannie at 236-4374 or [mackenzi].

• Found: A TI-82 calculator. If you think it is yours, please call x3650 and describe it.

• Found: Light blue Schwinn 10-speed with metal coil lock. Found on Sept. 14. e-mail: [chodacki].

Weekly Campus Crime Report

Reported:

• On September 15 it was reported that during the evening September 14 a garbage can of aluminum cans was stolen from James Hall.

• On September 15 it was reported that around midnight a person driving a silver gray Chevrolet Celebrity (automobile) was trying to run over students near 1316 Park and Langan Hall.

• On September 16 it was reported that a garbage can of aluminum cans was stolen from the first and second floor of Read Hall and the basement and first floor of Loose Hall.

Questions/Concerns/Comments please Vax (Safety) or call Student Affairs at X3700.

Chaplain's Office Announcements

• Christian Worship. All services are in Herrick Chapel at 11:00 a.m.

• September 28 Worship Service, interdenominational; Rev. Deanna Shorb, Chaplain preaching; Laura Davis '98 guest organist. All are welcome!

If you would like to participate as a reader, greeter or worship leader, contact the Chaplains Office, ext. 4981.

• Jewish Worship. Please join us on Fridays at 5:15 p.m. in Steiner 305 for Kabbalat Shabbat service. Services are liberal/egalitarian in Hebrew and English, with music and song. All are welcome!

• Spirituality Gathering. Lets talk about spirituality, what guides us in our spiritual growth, Wednesday, September 24 at 9:00 p.m. on the lawn, east side of Steiner Hall. Coordinated by the Chaplains Interfaith Association. All are welcome!

• Criminal Justice Ministries. You are invited to an informal sharing of the Criminal Justice Ministries 11th Annual Prison Awareness Walk on Tuesday, September 23 at 7:00 p.m. in Steiner 305. All are welcome! The Criminal Justice Ministries is a faith-based ecumenical non-profit organization that addresses issues related to the oppression of prisons and jail, and works for restorative justice, reconciling prisoners and society.

***

Hispanic Heritage Month

A list of all Hispanic Heritage Month activities is an addendum to this week's Campus Memo.

Lost and Found

• Lost: Alumni Banner Missing: During the weekend of September 12-14, a white banner that reads "Welcome Alumni and Guests," was detached from the fencing around the Alumni Office at 1102 Broad Street. The banner is large and white with the Grinnell logo and the text is printed in black. If you have the banner PLEASE return it or if you know where the banner is please call us x4801. The banner can be left on the porch or brought into the office,


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Faculty/Staff Announcements

Free Week-end to Chicago

Model United Nations is looking for a faculty/staff member to drive the Model U.N. team to Chicago for a conference from Thursday Oct. 30 to Sunday, Nov. 2, 1997. Model United Nations will pay for the room and food for the driver; so essentially it's a free week-end in Chicago! If interested please vax MODELUN or call Mehr Latif x 3903.

Weight Watchers

"Weight Watchers" is currently offering a 10 week totally new program. The Staying Well program will sponsor half the cost of the $99 membership. Meetings are held each Thursday in the PEC Honor G/Cubs room at 12:15 p.m. We need 18 participants to provide this service. If interested, please call Mary at x3804 by Thursday, Sept. 25.

Student Announcements

Career Development Announcements

GRE Deadline

Grinnell College will be a November 1 test site for the GREs. Deadline for receipt of regular registrations at ETS is September 26. Registration forms are available at the Career Development Office.

Two Grad School Exam Prep Workshops

The Career Development Office is sponsoring workshops to help you prepare for the GRE. The sessions remaining will be held on September 23 and 25. The topics yet to be covered include GRE Verbal (tonight); and GRE Math, Sept. 25. These sessions are from 7 - 9 p.m. in ARH 102.

Please stop by the CDO to sign up and reserve your space in these remaining workshops.

Drake Career Day

Grinnell students are invited to attend Career Day '97 at Drake University on Wednesday, October 1, 1997 from 10 a.m. - 3 p.m. Representatives from nearly 100 organizations will be there to talk with students about career opportunities, internships and graduate school programs. Seminars offered include "International Business Careers" at Noon and "Choosing & Applying to Graduate School" at 11:00 a.m. All events are held in the Drake University Olmsted Center.

New CDO Web Page

Check out our new look and the addition of new resources at http://www.grin.edu/~career

Resume Deadline Extended

DST Systems, Inc. (Kansas City, MO) has extended the deadline for resumes, cover letters and transcripts due in the Career Development Office to Friday, September 26, 1997. DST Systems is looking to hire liberal arts graduates for their new LOGON program. This program trains students from any major to become COBOL programmers. A complete job description is available in the CDO.

***

Community Service Center Announcements

• On Tuesday, Sept. 23rd, Lisa Jentzen, who has just returned from her assignment in Guatemala as part of the Guatemala Accompaniment Project, will meet with interested students, faculty and staff in PDR B of the College Forum at noon. Coincidentally, Lisa's visit foreshadows the Thursday campus visit of Alejandro Funes, a community leader from Nueva Esperanza, Guatemala who will speak at 4:15 and 8 p.m. about living in the newly created community.

• Federal Work Study/Community Service Program job opportunities are still available for the 1997-98 academic year. Earn your award through community service work with local non-profit organizations in town. Contact Amy at the Community Service Center X4247.

***

Debate Judges

Grinnell High School needs judges for the fall debates. A small stipend is available. Please call Lamoyne Gaard for information. High School: 236-2720; Home: 236-3598.

Grinnell Review Meeting

An organizational meeting will be held for those interested in working on the staff of the Grinnell Review (annual literary magazine) on Thursday, September 25th, at 8:00 p.m. in Forum PDR E. Vax [REVIEW] with questions."

Lunch with Trustees

On Friday, September 26, from noon-1 p.m., several members of the Board of Trustees will have an informal lunch in the coffeehouse with students. As space in the Coffeehouse is limited, any students interested in attending should send a message via e-mail to Erin [Childres]s by Wednesday, September 24.

Off-Campus Study in Russia and Eastern Europe

Students interested in pursuing off-campus study in Russia and Eastern Europe are invited to attend an informational meeting sponsored by the Russian Department. Grinnell students who have participated in recent programs will share their experiences and answer questions, and faculty members will be on hand to provide information about other programs for off-campus study in Russia and Eastern Europe. The meeting will be held at 4:15 p.m. on Thursday, September 25th, in ARH 227.

• Training to become an advocate for Domestic Violence Alternatives/Sexual Assault Center will be held Sept. 23,25,27,30 and November 2. Please contact the CSC X4247 or DVA at 1-800-779-3512 for an application.


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Sixth Annual Science Student Research Poster Session

The Sixth Annual Science Student Research Symposium has been scheduled for 10 a.m.-12 noon on Saturday, Oct. 4, 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 you 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, Sci, 1232, by Wed., Sept. 24.

Student Support Group

Are you a queer/questioning person of color? Are you struggling with cultural and sexual identities? Has your mother ever called you an atrocity in a language other than English? Us too! QPOC is a new discussion/support group forming to address these issues and more in a relaxed, informal atmosphere. Anyone interested, please vax [leee] or [rodrigum] for more information.

Student Employment

Catering Jobs Available at Grinnell House

Flexible hours, $5.50 per hour to start. Stop by the Office of Dining Services or call extensions 4210 or 3661 to schedule an interview. Needed: 30 students to work Science Building Dedication Reception and Dinner on Friday evening September 26th. Work approximately 5 hours and earn around $30.00. Call ext. 3661 to sign up or sign up at either Quad or Cowles Dining Halls.

Student Security Employment

All-Campus Events is taking applications for security members. Applications are available in the SGA Offices. Students need to be in at least their second semester at Grinnell.

Take Back the Night

If you are interested in sharing a poem, a song, or even speaking at Take Back the Night on Thursday, October 9, please e-mail [PAFA] by Thursday, October 2. Everyone is encouraged to participate.

Track & Field

There will be a meeting for those interested in joining the varsity track and field team who are currently not participating in a fall sport. The meeting will be Thursday, Sept. 25 at 7:30 p.m. in the PEC Honor G/Cubs room. Pre-season conditioning will be discussed and handouts distributed. Questions, e-mail: [freemanw] or [freemane].

Academic Awards/Scholarships/Internships/Grants

Call for Papers: Africana Studies Concentration

The Africana Studies Concentration Announces a "call for papers." Details are available in the Africana Studies Concentration addendum.


The on-line Campus Memo was created on September 23, 1997 by Amartey Pearson
Send comments about page to Studweb@ac.grin.edu Last Modified September 23, 1997