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Currents

THIS ISSUE POSTED September 28, 1999
CURRENTS VOLUME 17, ISSUE 3
To submit material to Currents, e-mail currents@d.umn.edu

CAMUS EVENTS

TWEED MUSEUM NEWS
The exhibition Botanica: Contemporary Artists and the World of Plants runs through October 12.
An artist lecture by Jean Humke will be presented at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, October 5.
An artist lecture by Todd Bockley will be presented at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, October 12.
For more information regarding the exhibitions and events mentioned above, call Mary at the Tweed Museum of Art at 726-7823.

HISPANIC/LATINO/CHICANA
FALL 1999 CELEBRATION
A Latin American Craft Sale will be held from 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. on September 27 - 29 in the Kirby Hallway.
The film: "Hispanic Education at the Crossroads" will be shown at noon on October 4 in Kirby 355-57. This program, hosted by actor, James Olmos, examines how Hispanic/Latino/ Chicano children are faring in the educational system, with an emphasis on bilingual education.
The film: Ties that Bind: Immigration Stories will be presented at noon on October 11 in Kirby 355-57. This program looks at the human drama behind the current debate over U.S. immigration policy. It roams both sides of the Texas-Mexico border, exploring the root causes of why Mexicans immigrate. The role played by transnational corporations and their social and economic impact on both Mexicans and other North Americans is considered.
The exhibition and display "Dia de Los Muertos/Day of the Death" will be presented from October 27-November 3 in the Tweed Museum of Art. The Day of the Dead is a tradition which dates back to the Aztec civilization. The Aztecs believe that the soul of the dead returns home to the world of the living.
The film: The Double Life of Ernesto Gomez Gomez will be shown at noon on November 8 in Kirby 355-57. This moving, magical, yet informative documentary follows 15-year old Ernesto during the year he leaves his adopted family in Mexico, comes to live in the USA and gets to know his birth mother, Dylcia Pagan. She is a Puerto Rican patriot serving 55 years in a U.S. prison for trying to gain Puerto Rico's independence from the U.S. It is a journey of self-discovery for both mother and son. It is a story of adoption, immigration, colonialism, racism and love, set within the history of Mexico, Puerto Rico and the U.S.

MUSIC CONCERTS
Electric violinist Daryl Silberman will perform at 1 p.m. on Wednesday, September 29 in the Marshall Performing Arts Center.
James Pellerite, former solo flutist of the Philadelphia Orchestra and internationally renowned champion of the Native American Flute, joins UMD music faculty for an intriguing concert. at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 7 in the Tweed Museum of Art.
The Minnesota Contemporary Ensemble will present "Eight Songs for a Mad King" the tragic account of the madness of England's King George III, with soloist Robert Osborne at 7:30 p.m. on Sunday, October 10 in the Kirby Student Center Ballroom.

ALWORTH INTERNATIONAL
BROWN BAG SERIES
This popular series features UMD's faculty, staff, students, and Duluth community members sharing their international experiences. Presentations are free and are held at noon on Thursdays. For more information call 726 8229 or e-mail ints@d.umn.edu.
"Russia: Prospects and Dilemmas" with Alexis Pogorelskin, associate professor and head of the Department of History, will be presented on September 30 in Kirby Ballroom A. Pogorelskin will bring us up to date on the volatile situation in Russia where economic catastrophe and erratic leadership could spell disaster. Pogorelskin, a Russian historian and scholar who has made numerous trips to Russia, will assess Russia's prospects for the future.

FALL OUTDOOR PROGRAMS
Pre-registration is strongly encouraged for Outdoor Programs.
The class, "Bearing In: Map and Compass Skills" will be offered from 4 - 7 p.m. on Thursday, September 30. Those who are worried about getting lost in the woods or who enjoy
orienteering courses can learn how to use maps and compasses. Meet in the Sports & Health Center Lobby
Women's Climbing at Ely's Peak will be offered from 4 - 8 p.m. on Thursday, September 30. Ely's Peak is famous for it's awesome climbing and spectacular fall colors. This is a relaxing and supportive atmosphere. Bring a snack and join the fun. No experience is needed. Meet in the Sports & Health Center Lobby.

HOMECOMING '99
Celebrate a century of students, alumni and faculty at UMD on Saturday, October 2. After the 5k Fun Run/Walk at 9 a.m., stop over to the Bulldog Boulevard Carnival at 10 a.m. in Ordean Court. The Jim Malosky Day Alumni Brunch will also be held at 10 a.m. in front of Griggs Field (pre-registration required.) Parade decorating begins at 11 a.m. in front of Griggs Field and the Parade starts at 1 p.m. at the Darland parking lot. Tailgaiting starts at noon in front of Griggs Field and the UMD vs Moorhead football game begins at 2 p.m. Finally the Jim Malosky Hall of Fame Induction Dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. at the Romano Gym.
The day includes a Kiddie Carnival, a Dunk Tank, a chainsaw carving demonstration, the UMD Pep Band and live radio remote broadcasts.
For more information contact Wendy Adams at 726-8829 or email wadams@d.umn.edu.

ROTC 50TH REUNION
Air Force ROTC Detachment 420 will be celebrating 50 years on the UMD campus the weekend of homecoming, October 1 and 2. Many past cadets and staff will be attending a variety of special events during this first all-class reunion. If anyone wishes to come meet their past students at the 50th Anniversary Social on Friday, October 1 in the Kirby Ballroom, please call 726-8159 for more information and to register. On Saturday, October 2, ROTC will hold an open house in the ROTC building from 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.

MILITARY DANGER
"The Future of War: Why New Military Capabilities Cause Old Political Dangers" is the title of the talk to be given by Bradley Thayer at noon on Tuesday, October 5 in Ballroom C of Kirby Student Center. Thayer received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in 1996. He has been a fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard University and a consultant to the RAND Corporation in Santa Monica, California. He co authored America's Achilles' Heel: Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Terrorism and Covert Attack. Thayer is a new UMD assistant professor in the Department of Political Science. His lecture is free and open to the public. It is sponsored by the Alworth Institute for International Studies.

PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
The Minnesota Philosophical Society 1999 meetings will be held at UMD on
Saturday, October 9. Members of the UMD community are welcome to attend. For information contact David Cole, UMD Philosophy Department at dcole@d.umn.edu.

IN MEMORY
A tribute to Dr. Dorab N. Baria , professor, Department of Chemical Engineering, and his lifelong dedication to education will be held at 2 p.m., on Saturday, October 9 in the Marshall Performing Arts Center. A reception will follow the tribute.

SCANDINAVIAN SONG
The UMD Music Department presents a Scandinavian Song Festival.
Orphei Dränger, the male chorus from Uppsala, Sweden, will perform at 3 p.m. on Sunday, October 10 at First Lutheran Church, Duluth.
Eskil Hemberg, composer, former artistic director and general manager of Royal Swedish Opera; and former head of Swedish Composers Union will give a guest lecture on "Scandinavian Art Song" at noon on Tuesday, October 12 in 90 Bohannon Hall.
Eskil Hemberg will also give a guest lecture on "Swedish Opera in the 20th Century" at noon on Thursday, October 14 in 90 Bohannon Hall.
Eskil Hemberg will present a Vocal Masterclass on preparing for professional auditions; coaching of Finnish and Swedish music at 1 p.m. on Thursday, October 14 in 106 Voss-Kovach Hall.
A Recital Of Finnish Art Songs by UMD faculty, students, and special guests will be presented at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 14 in 90 Bohannon Hall. A reception follows the recital.


CAMPUS NEWS

WOMEN'S ISSUES - GRANTS
The Commission on Women announces that applications for grants are currently being accepted for the 1999-2000 school year. Applications are available from Dorothy Olson, American Indian Learning Resource Center, 209 Bohannon Hall, or by calling 726-6350. The grant information and applications are also available on the web at: http://www.d.umn.edu/ comwomen.
Small grants are for amounts up to $300 and are accepted at any time throughout the year. Major grants are $301 -$1,000 and must be submitted by April 15 for funding requests for programs to be held Fall Semester and by November 15 for funding requests for programs to be held Spring Semester.

VISITING PROF
Professor Michel Guilloton from the Faculty of the Sciences, University of
Limoges, France, will be at UMD on a sabbatical leave from February through July, 2000 to work on the catalytic mechansim of the enzyme cyanase in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. Note: He and his wife, Michele, are looking for furnished housing to rent. Contact Paul Anderson at 726-7921 or panderso@d.umn.edu.

GLENSHEEN MAKES NEWS
Glensheen Historic Estate was featured on the cover of the latest edition of American Bungalow. The quarterly magazine is published in the interest of preserving and restoring the modest American 20th-Century home, the bungalow. Restoration, accessories, furnishings, events, arts and crafts movement philosophy, gardening and landscaping are the focus of the magazine.
Glensheen, although thought of more as an elaborate turn-of-the-century estate, was built during the arts and crafts movement. Glensheen's third floor bedrooms and lounge, smoking room and breakfast room are decorated in this style. Copies of the magazine are available in Glensheen's Museum Shop. For more information, call Glensheen at 726-8910.

ATHLETIC READERS
The Duluth Superior Area Community Foundation recently nominated the UMD Athletic Department for a Touchstone Award for its "Reading with Champions" program. Pati Rolf is the coordinator of this program and Don Collins is the coordinator of the youth and services unit. Congratulations!

ALPHA NU OMEGA NEWS
UMD retired photographer Ken Moran was made an honorary member during the Alpha Nu Omega 40th Anniversary Reunion in September.


STUDENT WEB CONTEST 2000
Once again, UMD is sponsoring a Student Web contest. The project is to develop a Web site for an undergraduate course and/or Web-based materials for an undergraduate course.
Undergraduate and graduate students are eligible. Each student must have an identified faculty or departmental sponsor. You can submit more than one entry but only one winning entry per student will be awarded. The project is to develop a Web site for an undergraduate course and/or Web-based materials for an undergraduate course. Five $500 awards will be given.
The deadline for submission of the completed Course Web Site is January 28, 2000. Winners will be notified by February 18, 2000. Notify spihlaja@d.umn.edu as soon as possible, but no later than December 1, 1999, if you intend to participate in this Web Contest. Pick up additional information and a more thorough explanation from Sheri Pihlaja, 6975, Bohannon 109, or spihlaja@d.umn.edu.

CURRENTS SCHEDULE
Currents is printed regularly throughout the school year. The rest of the Fall Semester 1999 schedule is as follows:
Deadline: Wednesday, October 6;
Print date: Tuesday, October 12.
Deadline: Wednesday, October 20;
Print date: Tuesday, October 26.
Deadline: Wednesday, November 3;
Print date: Tuesday, November 9.
Deadline: Wednesday, November 17;
Print date: Tuesday, November 23.
Deadline: Wednesday, December 1;
Print date: Tuesday, December 7.
Deadline: Wednesday, December 15;
Print date: Tuesday, December 24.
Submit items to Currents via e-mail at currents@d.umn.edu. Communication student intern Teresa Thompson helped edit this issue of Currents. Questions? Contact Cheryl Reitan at 726-8996. Currents can be viewed at www.d.umn.edu/currents.

SPEECH-LANGUAGE-HEARING
UMD's Robert F. Pierce Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic is now scheduling appointments for the Fall Semester. They provide a variety of services including evaluation, treatment and counseling for persons with speech, language or hearing disorders. The Clinic is available to meet the needs of all age agroups. For further information or to make an appointment for services, contact 726-8199.

NEWS FROM THE UMD STORES
Josten's Ring Days will be on September 29 and 30 from 9:30 - 1:30 in the Kirby Student Center
There will be an imprinted gift offer in the UMD Bulldog Shop, Campus Books or UMD Marketplace on Wednesday, October 13.
On Wednesday, October 13, get 10% off Lippincott Review Books in CampusBooks.
On Wednesday, October 20, there will be a General Book Sale in Campus
Books. Some exclusions apply.
From October 19 through October 23, get 20% off tapes and CD's. Register to win a Boom Box in Campus Books. No purchases necessary.
BULLDOG SHOP EVENTS:
From October 1 - 9, bring in the Statesman coupon and get $5 off selected clothing items. And... everyone will be eligible to register for a mountain bike. No purchases necessary.
The UMD Bulldog Shop will participate in Bulldog Blvd. during the
Homecoming on October 2 from 10 - 2 in Ordean Court.
MARKETPLACE EVENTS:
From October 11 - November 13, buy a 12 Pack of soft drinks and get a free dry erase memo board in the UMD Marketplace.

GRIGGS DINING CENTER
Join your friends for coffee or lunch in the relaxing atmosphere of Griggs Dining Center. The facility is available to all faculty and staff. Griggs is located on the second floor of Kirby.

BETTER U
Incorporated in the UMD Life Fitness Program for Fall Semester are a number of Better "U" fitness classes offering beginning participants exercise basics in a user friendly environment. The classes are designed to educate and motivate. No experience is required. Regardless of age, gender, or fitness level, participants can begin to improve health, reduce stress, look better, feel better, and have fun. Payroll deduction option is available before September 30 in the Recreational Sports office at 121 SpHC or call 726 7128.

FACULTY/STAFF NEWS

Lisa Bartel, KUMD radio announcer, wrote an article, "He Rescued Me!" that appeared in a recent edition of Woman's World magazine. The story is one of the finalists being considered for a new book, The Best of the Heartwarmers.

Gloria DeFilipps Brush, professor and head, Department of Art, showed
three digital photographs in the SIGGRAPH 99 Gallery: TechnOasis
exhibition in Los Angeles in August. SIGGRAPH is the International
Conference on Computer Graphics and Interactive Techniques. Eleven prints
by Brush were acquired recently for the permanent collection of the Akron
Art Museum in Ohio.

Tom Isbell, Department of Theater, put on a one-person play Me and JFK , in August. The play was performed by Leigh Selting at the Festival of Arts in New Paltz, New York. The play is about growing up in the Kennedy years.

Clay Keller, Department of Education, along will colleagues from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, gave two presentation at the 1999 Conference of the European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction in Gothenburg, Sweden last August. With Annlaug Flem, he presented "Inclusion in Norway: A Study of Ideaology Put Into Practice," and with Ragnar Thygesen, he presented "Videoconferencing Between Norway and The United States in Education Courses."

Jim Klueg, professor, Department of Art, has a solo exhibition of his ceramics at the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, North Dakota, this month. The show coincides with his visiting artist lecture at the Hughes Fine Arts Center.

Joyce Kramer, professor, Department of Social Work, lectured on Sustainable Development to engineers at universities in ten cities in China and four in Pakistan, during her 1998-1999 sabbatical leave-of absence. The lecture she gave, entitled "Technical and Socio-economic Change for a Sustainable Future," was published in The Paskistan Engineer, May 1999. Another paper which she co-authored with Claude D. Johnson, "Sustainable Development in Civil and Structural Engineering Education - A Partnership of Necessity for the Twenty-First Century," was published in Proceedings of the International Symposium on 21st Century Education in Civil & Structural Engineering. During the winter months, Kramer lived in Costa Rica where she worked on textbooks that she is co-editing with Johnson. These books addressed the relationships between global sustainable, social and infrastructure development. She also attended a professional conference in Peru, where she presented two papers at the Conference on An Aging Planet, an Expanding Population and a Sustainable Future which was sponsored by the Center for Public Service, University of North Texas-Denton. The papers are entitled: "Population Dynamics and the Modern Work Economic System: A Case Study in Kenya," and "Cuba's Sustainability Project of World Significance," which was co-authored by Johnson. She also presented another paper, co-authored by Johnson, "Adapting Nature's Ways and Indigenous Knowledge for a Sustainable Future," at The Sixth Circumpolar University Co operation Conference which was held at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, in June. A review by Kramer of Robert Geddes (Ed.) book, "Cities in Our Future: Growth and Form, Environmental Health and Social Equity," was published in Sustainable Communities Review, Spring 1999.

Richard Leino, senior research associate, Anatomy and Cell biology, and Howard McCormick, EPA, have authored an article: "Factors Contributing to First Year Recruitment Failure of Fishes in Acidified Waters With Some Implications of Environmental Research." It appeared in the Transactions of the American Fisheries Society, 128: 265-277, 1999.

Arlene Lodahl, UMD Stores, has nine abstract works on paper at Jitters Coffee and Tea House in Duluth through the end of October.

Ron Marchese, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, will be conducting archaeological research with the Austrian Institute of Classical Archaeology for the next three years at the ancient site of Plataea, Greece. The site dates to at least the third millennium B.C., but is important as the location for the final phase of the Persian invasion of Greece where, in 479 B.C. the remnant of the Persian army under the command of Mardonius, cousin to the Persian king Xerxes, was defeated by the combine Greek army under Cleomenes, king of Sparta. Marchese also has received the blessing of the Armenian Patriarch, Mesrob III to continue his evaluation of the sacred textiles of the Armenian churches of Istanbul. Many of the churches were badly damaged in the recent earthquake that devastated western Turkey. Professor Marchese has recently been asked by Oxford University Press to evaluate a substantial monograph entitled "Roman Ideas: Their Origin, Nature, and Function".

Jackie Moran, oral history coordinator and Neil Storich, professor, Department of History, conducted videotape interviews with Kamal S. Gindy, Depart-ment of Psychology; James S Malosky, football coach and Department of Health, Physical Education and Recrea-tion; and Joanne Line, Administrative Services, Library. These interviews are part of an ongoing oral history project designed to preserve the history of UMD. Technical assistance was provided by Kathryn Fuller, Chad M. Dahlberg and Ken Moran. The UMD Oral History Project is assisted by a grant from Regents Professor George R Rapp.

Ron Morton, professor, Department of Geological Sciences, has written a new book entitled Talking Rocks - Geology and 10,000 years of Native American Tradition in the Lake Superior Region. The unusual book is not only a story of geological history told from two perspectives, it is also a chronical of the two people from very different cultural and scientific heritages learning to understand and appreciate each other's clashing yet, complementary way of viewing this land we call home.

James J. Vileta, business librarian, and Kathryn W. Fuller, Government Documents Library, gave a presentation Statistical Savvy with Government Publications last May at the Twelfth Annual Minnesota-South Dakota Government Information Forum in Edina, Minnesota.

Tom Wegren, professor, Department of Music, is one of five composers selected nationally to participate in the New Music Festival held at Truman State University in Kirksville, Missouri this coming November. Wegren will conduct Composition Master Classes and participate in a panel discussion on "New Music Compositional Techniques." He will perform his composition Vignettes for Piano in concert. Two of his other works will also be performed in concert: Land of the Morning Calm - a symphonic suite in six movements, Songs for Gitanjali for tenor, piano and Musique Concrete - a cycle of nine art songs based on the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore.

Tom Zogg, reference librarian, published a review of The Penguin Dictionary of Geography in the September 1999 issue of Choice, p. 117. He is a member of the Ansari Best Reference Work Award Committee of the Geoscience Information Society, which will present the award at the Geological Society of America Annual Meeting in Denver in October.

SEA GRANT NEWS
Cindy Hagley, environmental quality educator, published the paper, "Shoreland Education: Turning Shoreland Owners into Shoreland Stewards," with co-author Barb Liukkonen in the July 1999 Watershed & Wet Weather Technical Bulletin.


Douglas Jensen, exotic species information center coordinator, gave a
presentation at a meeting of the Western Lake Superior Trollers Association entitled, "Aliens in Our Waterways," in Duluth in May. Jensen gave the presentation "Impacts of Non-Native Species on Lake Superior Fisheries" at the Operation Pathfinder workshop held for teachers at UMD in June. Jensen gave a presentation "Update on Prevention, Control and Management of Aquatic Nuisance Species in Minnesota" at a training session for Minnesota Conservation Corps (MCC) watercraft inspectors MnDNR Headquarters in St. Paul in June. As the only program of its kind nationally, MCC staff stationed at water accesses across Minnesota each season inform boaters about proper actions they should take to prevent the spread of aquatic exotic plants and animals, like zebra mussels and Eurasian watermilfoil, and inform them about state laws that prohibit transport on public roads.

NRRI NEWS
Subhash Basak presented the following papers at the recent QSAR Gordon Conference, in Tilton, New Hampshire: A Hierarchical QSAR Approach for Predicting Property/Activity of Chemicals, authored by Basak, Greg Grunwald, Brian Gute, Denise Mills, Krishnan Balasubramanian (Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University) and Alexandru Balaban (Polytechnic University, Bucharest, Romania) and Topological Indices as Molecular Descriptors for QSAR, authored by Balaban and Basak. The following poster/abstract: "Contamination of Mafic Magmas by Crustal Material in the Layered-Igneous Complex of Duluth, Minnesota," was presented at the Rouyn-Noranda Symposium 1999 on Ore Forming Processes in Dynamic Magmatic Systems by Mark Severson, Jean Lefrance, (former NRRI Visiting Research Fellow), Ed Sawyer, and Sarah Jane-Barnes. Lafrance, Sawyer, and Barnes are from the Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi, Quebec, Canada.

Barb McCarthy, CARTD-Peat, recently received a Certificate of Commendation from Governor Jesse Ventura for her work and partnership in a regional wastewater treatment effort. McCarthy has been successful in bringing together both public and private sectors to design, construct and monitor alternative wastewater treatment systems for resorts across northern Minnesota. As examples of performance based systems, they are used at locations where inadequate soil conditions prevent use of traditional treatment methods. To date, constructed wetlands, engineered mounds, recirculating sand filters and drip irrigation distribution systems have been installed. She leads a team which includes representatives from the Northern Tourism Alliance (NTLA) of the Iron Range Resources and Rehabilitation Board (IRRRB), Minnesota Department of Health, the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency and St. Louis, Cook, Lake, Itasca, Aitkin, Crow Wing and Cass Counties. The IRRRB's Northern Lights Tourism Alliance provides overall direction for the project.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS - September 28 - October 23
Tuesday, September 28
Hispanic/Latino/Chicana Celebration: Keynote Speaker, Yolanda Lopez, 7 p.m., Kirby Ballroom.

Tuesday, September 29
UMD Music Department presents Darly Silberman, electric violinist, 1 p.m., Marshall Performing Arts Center.

Thursday. September 30
Alworth Institute Brown Bag Series: "Russia: Prospects and Dilemmas," noon, Kirby Ballroom A.

Friday, October 1
Soccer: UMD vs. Bemidji State, 7 p.m., Griggs Field.
Air Force ROTC Detachment 420, 50th year social, Kirby Ballroom.

Saturday, October 2
Homecoming 5k fun run/walk, 10 a.m., Ordean Court.
AFROTC Detachment 420 50-year Reunion Open House, 10 a.m. - 1 p.m., ROTC Building
Homecoming Bulldog Boulevard Carnival, 10 a.m., Ordean Court.
Homecoming: Jim Malosky Day Alumni Brunch, 10 a.m., in front of Griggs Field.
Homecoming Parade, 1 p.m., campus.
Football: UMD vs. Moorhead State, Homecoming Game,
2 p.m., Griggs Field.
Jim Malosky Hall of Fame Induction, 6:30 p.m., Romano Gym.

Monday, October 4
Hispanic/Latino/Chicana Film: "Hispanic Education at the Crossroads," noon, Kirby 355-57.

Tuesday, October 5
Bradley Thayer lecture, noon, Kirby Ballroom C.
Artist Lecture Series: Jean Humke, sculptor, 6:30 p.m., Tweed.

Wednesday, October 6
Artist Lecture Series: Nat Zimmerman, motion graphics artist, noon, Tweed.
Soccer: UMD vs. St. Scholastica, 7 p.m., Griggs Field.
Civil Rights Forum: "Comparing Race Relations in the 1960s and 1990s," Diane Nash, 7 p.m., KSC Ballroom.

Thursday, October 7
UMD Music: James Pellerite, Native American Flute, 7:30 p.m. Tweed.

Friday, October 8
Volleyball: UMD vs. Southwest State, 7 p.m., Romano Gym.

Saturday, October 9
A tribute to Dr. Dorab N. Baria, 2 p.m. Marshall Performing Arts Center.
Minnesota Philophical Society 1999 meeting, campus.
Volleyball: UMD vs. Wayne State, 3 p.m., Romano Gym.

Sunday, October 10
Music: Scandinavian Song Festival: Orphei Dränger, 3 p.m., First Lutheran Church, Duluth.
UMD Music Minnesota Contemporary Ensemble, 7:30 p.m., Kirby Ballroom.

Monday, October 11
Hispanic/Latino/Chicana Film: Ties that Bind: Immigration Stories, noon, Kirby 355-57.

Tuesday, October 12
Todd Bockley lecture, 6:30 p.m., Tweed.
Music: Scandinavian Song Lecture: "Scandinavian Art Song," noon, 90 Bohannon Hall.

Thursday, October 14
Music: Scandinavian Song Lecture: "Swedish Opera in the 20th Century," noon, 90 Bohannon Hall.
Music: Scandinavian Song Vocal Masterclass: 1 p.m., 106 Voss-Kovach Hall.
Music: Scandinavian Song Festival: A Recital Of Finnish Art Songs, 7:30 p.m., 90 Bohannon Hall.

Friday, October 15
Women's Hockey: UMD vs. Finnish National, 7:05 pm., DECC.

Saturday, October 16
Football: UMD vs. Northern State, noon, Griggs Field.
Soccer: UMD vs. Concordia- St. Paul, 4 p.m., Griggs Field.
Women's Hockey: UMD vs. Finnish National, 7:05 pm., DECC.

Sunday, October 17
Soccer: UMD vs. Winona State, 1 p.m., Griggs Field.
Men's Hockey: UMD vs. Canadian National, 7:05 p.m., DECC.

Thursday, October 21
Into the Woods, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Friday, October 22
Women's Hockey: UMD vs. Bemidji State, 7:05 p.m., DECC.
Theatre: Into the Woods, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Saturday, October 23
Women's Hockey: UMD vs. Bemidji State, 7:05 p.m., DECC.
Theatre: Into the Woods, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Sunday, October 24
Theatre: Into the Woods, 8 p.m., MPAC.

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