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Currents

THIS ISSUE POSTED FEBRUARY 8, 2000
CURRENTS VOLUME 17, ISSUE 11
To submit material to Currents, e-mail currents@d.umn.edu

CAMPUS EVENTS

UMD LIBRARY DISPLAY
The Ramseyer-Northern Bible Society Museum Collection's display housed at the UMD Library translates into English of the story of the Good Samaritan.
The display may be seen on the third floor of the UMD Library at any time during regular Library hours. For further information, call the Library Office at 726-8102, or visit the Ramseyer-Northern Bible Society Museum Collection website at http://www.d.umn.edu/lib/bible.

TWEED MUSEUM NEWS
The Tweed Museum of Art is featuring a variety of original prints created at two university-affiliated print studios "Works on Paper Series, Part II: Prints from the Center for Innovative Print and Paper at Rutgers University and Normal Editions Workshop at Illinois State University." The exhibition runs through April 2. In conjunction with this exhibition the Tweed will be featuring the following events:
At 10 a.m. on Wednesday, February 16, there will be an Artist Lecture Series featuring visual artist Glenna Shrimpton.
All lectures will be held in the Tweed Lecture Gallery and are free and open to the public. For more information on any of the events listed, call Mary at 726-7823.

JOB FAIR
The Head of the Lakes Job Fair will take place from 2 p.m. until 6 p.m. on Wednesday, February 9 and from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m. on Thursday, February 10 in Kirby Ballroom
Admission is one copy of your resume. For list of employers attending go to Upcoming Events Job Fairs at: http://careers.d.umn.edu.

BLACK HISTORY MONTH
CELEBRATED
Several events are planned to celebrate Black History Month.
At 7 p.m. on February 9 keynote speakers Victor Lewis and Hugh Vasquez will present "Talking About Racism: Confronting the Issue and Building Alliances." The talk will take place in the Kirby Ballroom.
Victor Lewis is special projects director for the Oakland Men's Project. He is an internationally recognized educator, speaker and consultant in diversity. He is Co-Chair of the Leadership Council of the National Organization for Men Against Sexism and President of the Board of Eco Rap and environmental justice performing arts group in San Francisco.
Hugh Vasques, is Co-Founder of TODOS: Sherover Simms Alliance Building Institute in Oakland, CA. He is a nationally recognized authority on creating healthy multi-cultural organizations and founder of New Bridges, an innovative diversity summer camp for youth. He has authored various articles and a manual on "un-learning" oppression. This event is free and open to the public.
At 6 p.m. on February 16 there will be a panel discussion on "African Americans and Africans: A Dialogue About our Roots." The discussion will take place in Kirby Rafters. This event is free and open to the public.
At 6 p.m. on February 19 there will be a Soul Food Dinner with food, entertainment and a dance. The cost is $14 for the general public, $10 for students and $7 for children. Tickets go on sale February 8.
For more information about tickets call 726-8115. These events are sponsored by the African American Learning Resource Center, Black Student Association.

OUTDOOR CAREER DAY
An Outdoor Career Day will take place from 9 a.m.- 2 p.m. on Wednesday, February 9. Employers representing diverse kinds of careers will be available to tell you about their work in the outdoors. This is also a good time to find either summer employment or establish your career. Employers from canoe camps, law enforcement, resource management, government agencies, environmental education and research biology will be on hand. Representatives will be set up in Kirby Student Center across from the Bookstore.

UMD THEATRE
Winner of London's Best Comedy award, Man of the Moment features
the reunion of a former bank robber and the bank clerk whose unexpected heroism seventeen years earlier foiled the bank raid and put the robber behind bars. While the bank robber exploited his "celebrity status" and went on to become a successful and wealthy TV
personality, the bank clerk has fallen into shabby obscurity. Now the subject of a TV documentary, the two meet again, with the producer desperately hoping for Jerry Springer-like theatrics. There's only one problem: the bank clerk is the bank robber's biggest fan.
Thought-provoking in how people and the media treat good and evil, it's
"a completely serious play at which the audience laughs without stopping." Man of the Moment is a comedy by Alan Ayckbourn performed at 8 p.m. on February 9-12 in the Marshall Performing Arts Center.

INTERNATIONAL
BROWN BAG SERIES
Brown Bags are held Thursdays
at noon at UMD in Kirby Student Center. The seminars are free and open to the public.
On February 10 the presentation, "Landscapes in Britain," with Tony Sames, British botanist and naturalist, will include slides of England, Scotland and Wales. Professor Sames is a member of the faculty at the University of Birmingham Westhill College campus and teaches "The Natural History of the English Countryside" for UMD's Study in England Programme. The slide show will take place in the Bullpub.
On February 17 the presentation, "The International Criminal Court: A Plan for World Law" will take place in the Bullpub. Andy Anderson, retired State of Minnesota labor mediator and peace activist, will tell about the proposal for the ICC which, when signed and ratified by 60 nations, will investigate and bring to justice those who commit the most serious violations of international humanitarian law.
On February 24 the presentation "Exploring Links with Rural Women in Costa Rica" will take place in Ballroom A. Stephanie Hemphill, news director at KUMD-FM Radio, Dianna Hunter, instructor in Women's Studies and Composition and Penny Cragun, director of the Access Center at UMD, traveled with a group to Costa Rica in May of 1999 to explore a possible relationship between UMD and women in Costa Rica. By means of slides, they will tell the story of the women who have organized community self help projects and communication networks.
On March 2 the presentation "Health Care in Petrozavodsk, Karelia, Russia: A Humanitarian Aid Project" will take place in the Rafters. Ed Haller, professor in the School of Medicine at UMD and advisor to the Petrozavodsk Student Exchange Committee, along with a group of UMD medical students, embarked on a humanitarian mission to Russia last summer. Dr. Haller and one or more students will show slides and tell about their mission and the status of medical care in Russia today.
On March 9 the presentation "Western Ireland: Sights, Sounds and Experiences" will take place in the Rafters. Mary Ellet Shehadeh, professor of Psychology, Meridith Schifsky, assistant professor of Nursing, and Becky Stark, biology student, all from the College of St. Scholastica, spent spring 1999 in Ireland as part of CSS's study abroad program in Louisburgh, Ireland. If their presentation and slides don't make you want to see the Emerald Isle, listening to Professor Schifsky play her Irish harp will!

GEOLOGY SEMINAR'S SPRING SCHEDULE
All seminars will take place on Thursdays at 4 p.m. in 185 Life Science. Refreshments are served at 3:45 p.m.
On February 10 John J. Quinn, Argonne National Laboratory, Argonne, IL will present "A Numerical Approach to Simulating Mixed Flow in Karst Aquifers" and "Why Are They Planting 800 Trees? A Summary of a Large Scale Phytoremediation Project and its Effect on Groundwater Flow."
On February 17 Gordon Medaris, Dept. of Geology & Geophysics, University of Wisconsin - Madison will present "The Baraboo Quartzite: A New Look at an Old Topic (Implications for Proterozoic Climate and Tectonics in the Lake Superior Region)."
On February 24 Debra Stakes, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute, Monterey, California, will present "From ALVIN and Oman to Seafloor Observations: The Future of Mid-Ocean Ridge "Black Smoker Studies."
On March 2 Keith Brugger, Department of Geology, University of Minnesota - Morris will present "Glaciers and Climate: Why I Spend Summers Chasing Winter in the Swedish Arctic."
On March 9 G. B. Morey, Minnesota Geological Survey, St. Paul, will present "Sedimentological Model for Unit A of the Emily District: A Typical Iron-Formation in the Paleoproterozoic Animikie Basin, Minnesota."
On March 16 Kim Heiskanen, Institute of Geology, Karelian Academy of Sciences, Petrozavodsk, Karelia, Russia will present "Paleoproterozoic History of the Baltic Shield."
On March 23 Kevin M. Bohacs, Exxon Production Research Company, Houston, Texas, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Distinguished Lecturer (Co-sponsored by Large Lakes Observatory, UMD) will present "Sequence Stratigraphy of Lake Basins: Unraveling the Influence of Climate & Tectonics."
On April 6 Jeffrey Niemitz, Department of Geology, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania, will present "Preparing Geology Majors for the Future: An Alternative Curriculum Model."
On April 13 Clint Cowan, Department of Geology, Carlton College, Northfield, Minnesota, will present "Upper Cambrian Facies and Events From Across Laurentia."
On April 20 Steve Stoutamire, Mgr. International New Ventures, Santa Fe Snyder Corp., Houston, Texas, American Association of Petroleum Geologists Visiting Geologists Program will present "The Oil and Gas Industry: Its History, Socioeconomic Impact, Some Methods and Case Examples."
On April 27 Ben Bertsch Resource Sciences Graduate Program and Department of Geological Sciences, UMD will present "Modeling Wellhead Capture Zones in Different Stratigraphic Settings: Four Examples From Cass County, Minnesota."

OUTDOOR PROGRAM NEWS
Cross Country Skiing Fundamentals will take place from noon- 4 p.m. on
Saturday, February 12. Don't hibernate this winter. Learn the basics of traditional (classical) cross country skiing on Duluth's own Bagley Nature Area ski trails. It may become a part of your winter lifestyle. The cost is $6 for UMD students and $12 for others. Paid registration is due at noon on February 9. Meet at the Bagley Nature Area Kiosk. (Just north of St. Marie Street and west of Oakland Apartments).
An Advanced Storytelling Workshop will be held from 6 - 9 p.m. on Tuesday, February 15. Share stories you have written or stories you love by other authors. Practice techniques designed to enhance story telling and learn how to make easy props and costumes that will delight audiences. Meet in the 119 Sports and Health Center.
Telemark Skiing will take place from 4:30 p.m. - 9 p.m. on Thursday, February 17 at Mont Du Lac. Discover the excitement and fun of the sport of telemark skiing. Learn the proper techniques with expert instruction in a high quality setting. The cost is $8 for UMD students and $16 for others. Paid registration is due at noon on February 16. Meet in the Sports and Health Center Lobby.
"North Shore Climbing - The Early Days" slide show will be presented at 7 p.m. on Thursday, February 17. Ever wonder what climbing was like in the late seventies, early eighties when many of the climbs on the North Shore were first established? Meet Dave Pagel and Rick Kollath, the author and illustrator of Superior Climbs a guide to climbing on the North Shore. This event is free. Meet in Kirby 333.

BOOK SIGNING
Henry Boucha, an Ojibwe from Warroad, MN, was a high school hockey sensation who went on to play on the U.S. National Team, for the Detroit Red Wings and the Minnesota North Stars. Boucha is also one of ten United States American Indian Olympians.
Boucha and Mary Halverson Scholfiled, author of Henry Boucha: Star of the North, will visit UMD in the Kirby Student Center Lounge from 5 - 8 p.m. on February 14. This event is free and open to the public. Reception with refreshments will follow.
For more information please call the AILRC at (218) 726-6379 or check our website: http:www.d.umn.edu/ailrc.

UNIVERSITY FOR SENIORS LECTURES
University for Seniors offer free lectures for those who would like to attend. The 45-minute lectures are held Wednesday afternoons.
"Buddhism: Plain and Simple" will be held at 1:15 p.m. on February 16 in the Bullpub. Steve Hagen is a Buddhist monk, ordained in 1979. He received dharma transmission in 1989, which gives him authority to teach. The title of his talk comes from his book.
"Russia: Prospects and Dilemmas" will be held at 1:15 p.m. on February 23 in the Rafters. Alexis Pogorelskin, associate professor and head of the Department of History, will bring us up to date on the volatile situation in Russia where economic catastrophe and erratic leadership could spell disaster. A Russian historian and scholar, she has made many trips to Russia. She will assess Russia's prospects for the future.

ANTHROPOLOGY SEMINAR
There will be an Anthropology seminar at 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, February 16 in 224 Cina Hall. Sharon Kemp, Anthropology Department, will present "Attitudes Toward Sled Dogs." The Anthropology seminars are co sponsored by the Sociology-Anthropology Department, the Archaeometry Laboratory and the Paleobiology Laboratory, UMD. This seminar is free and open to the public.

SAFETY AWARENESS
The Third Annual UMD Safety Awareness Fair will be held in the Kirby Student Center Ballrooms A and B on February 16. Programs planned range from chemical safety, ladder safety, back safety to workers compensation procedures for both supervisors and employees. Neck and shoulder chair massages, plus a demonstration site for keyboards and office chairs and booths on various safety issues will also be available.

THE KONA JOURNEY
University College Duluth is sponsoring a trip to Hawaii during spring
break 2000. The Kona Journey is an eight-day trip of personal discovery, optimum health and adventure. Participants will actualize a new and higher level of health, refocus their goals and life plan and participate in activities related to nutrition, stress management, inner power, fitness, wellness and personal growth.
For further information or to receive a brochure, contact Pauline Nuhring in University College at 726-6361 or email pnuhring@d.umn.edu
or instructor Rod Raymond at 726-8111 or email rraymond@d.umn.edu.

CAMPUS NEWS

ART STUDENT EXCELLS
Art student Amy Swanson had two pieces accepted into "Clay Bodies by
Students Bodies", an exhibition of MN college student ceramic work at Gustavus Adolphus College, March 18 - April 15. The exhibition juror was Verne Funk, Texas, ceramist and educator.

CURRENTS SCHEDULE
Currents is printed regularly throughout the school year. The remaining Spring 2000 schedule is:
Deadline: Wednesday, February 16;
Print date: Tuesday, February 22
Deadline: Wednesday, March 1;
Print date: Tuesday, March 7
Deadline: Wednesday, March 15;
Print date: Tuesday, March 21
Deadline: Wednesday, April 5;
Print date: Tuesday, April 11
Deadline: Wednesday, April 19;
Print date: Tuesday, April 25
Deadline: Wednesday, May 3;
Print date: Tuesday, May 9
Submit items to Currents via e-mail at currents@d.umn.edu. Communication student 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.

TECHFEST CALL FOR
PROPOSALS
The TechFest 2000 committee seeks proposals for booth demonstrations to be presented at the upcoming TechFest scheduled for March 10. This annual event is a wonderful opportunity to showcase the myriad of ways technology is being used on our campus to enhance or change the way we learn, teach and share information.
All students, staff and faculty are eligible and are strongly encouraged to participate. The deadline for proposals is February 9.
For information on submitting a proposal or other questions about TechFest 2000, contact Linda Blustin at 726-6111 or lblustin@d.umn.edu.

NEW LIFE FITNESS PASSES
This semester Life Fitness is offering three new options. Option one is a seven-week pass offered January 24 - March 10 or March 13- May 5 for students/ faculty pass holders at $35 or all others at $45 dollars. Option two is a Full Semester Pass offered January 24 - May 5 for students/faculty pass holders at $55 and all others at $75 dollars. Option three is the 10 Class Pass. Attend any 10 classes for $30 dollars. This semester Life Fitness is offering four new classes. Kardio Incorporating Kick (KIK) and a Fun Class are the new beginner level classes. Cardio Pump and Cardio Sport are the new advanced classes. In addition the Master Swim and Spin Classes are included with this year's pass.

UM SENATE AND ASSEMBLY
Faculty, academic professional staff and students are needed to fill 2000 01 vacancies on Senate and Assembly committees. Submit an application and/or nomination(s) by March 1 to the University Senate Office, 427 Morrill Hall, 100 Church St. SE, Minneapolis, MN 55455; phone: (612) 625 9369; fax: (612) 626-1609; email: senate@mailbox.mail.umn.edu. For a complete listing of the committees and/or and applications form, contact the Senate Office of visit the University Senate/TC Assembly Committees' website at http:www1.umn.edu/usenate/conc/commdescription.html.

AREA BOOK AWARD
The UMD Library and the Friends of the Duluth Public Library are
seeking nominations for the Twelfth Annual Northeastern Minnesota Book
Award.
The award recognizes books which best represent Northeastern Minnesota's history, culture, heritage or lifestyle. For the purposes of the award Northeastern Minnesota is defined to include the following counties: Aitkin, Carlton, Cook, Itasca, Kanabec, Koochiching, Lake, Pine and St. Louis. To be eligible for the award, the book must have been published in 1999.
To nominate a book: visit the the NEMBA website athttp://www.d.umn.
edu/lib/nemba/ or contact Jane Bottoms at 726-6560 or jbottom2@d. umn.edu. Nominations must be submitted by March 1, 2000.
An awards dinner honoring all nominated authors will be held on May 3 at the DECC. The featured speaker will be Joan Drury, 1997 NEMBA winner for her book, Silent Words. Watch your email for more information about the dinner.

FINNFEST SCHOLARSHIP
Applications are now being accepted for the eighth annual FinnFest USA '92
Scholarship. This scholarship is for full-time junior, senior or graduate level students at UMD or students planning to study in Finland. Students must be in good academic standing and be able to demonstrate financial need. Preference will be given to students of Finnish heritage and to those from northeast Minnesota and northwest Wisconsin. Students must self identify by filling out an application form. See Chris Ebert, 315 Darland Administration Building for applications. For questions, call Maryann Soleim at 726-8993. Deadline to submit completed application form is April 24.

NEWS FROM THE UMD STORES
CAMPUS BOOK EVENTS:
There will be a Color Film Reprint Special from Monday, February 7 through Friday, February 11. Some film is not included.
MARKETPLACE EVENTS:
Buy 9 cards at regular price, and get the 10th card free from January 10 through the end of the school year, Ask for your punch card in the Marketplace.
From Monday, February 7 through Friday, February 11, get 20% off all
Valentine Cards.
From Wednesday, February 9 through Monday, February 14, get 20% off all Valentine Candy.

FACULTY AND
STAFF NEWS

Gloria DeFilipps Brush, professor and head, Department of Art, has received an $8,000 Photographer's Fellowship from the Minnesota State Arts Board.

Njoki Kamau, assistant professor, Department of Women's Studies, and Joyce Kramer, professor, Department of Social Work, have been informed that their manuscript entitled "The AIDS Pandemic and the Sustainability of African Communities" has been accepted for publication in Social Development Issues and will be forthcoming in issue 21(3). The article is co-authored by Claude Johnson
of Lakehead University.

Jim Klueg, professor, Department of Art, won second place and a purchase award for his vase, Anno Digitalis, at the 56th Juried Exhibition at the Sioux City Art Center. Awards were selected by the center's director, Susan Lubowsky Talbott.

Arlene Lodahl, UMD Stores, received one of four Honorable Mentions in the
Marguerite duPont Boden Short Story Competition sponsored by the National League of American PEN Women, Inc, Diamond State Branch. Lodahl's entry is titled "Little Islands of Refuge." Entries were received from across the United States and other countries. Jurer was
novelist Cruce Stark from the University of Delaware.

Kathy Morris, Director of Counseling at Health Services, was elected to the National Board for the Association of University and College Counseling Center Directors in the fall.

Michael Linn, professor, Department of Linguistics, has been recognized as a 1999-2000 Fulbright Scholar. There are approximately only 750 Fulbright Scholars recognized this year.

Bill Tezla, professor emertius of English, recently had the sixth edition of his translation of István Lázár's Magyarország képes története published with the title An Illustrated History of Hungary by Corvina Books.

SEA GRANT NEWS
Doug Jensen, Exotic Species Information Center coordinator, gave a seminar, "Aquatic Nuisance Species Wreaking Havoc in U.S. Waters: The Duluth-Superior Harbor is Just a Tip of the Problem," to scientists at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Mid-Continent Ecology Division Laboratory, in Duluth in December.
Jensen recently co-authored a paper, "Zebra Mussel [Dreissena polymorpha
(Pallas)] Colonization of Rusty Crayfish [Orconectes rusticus (Girard)] in Green
Bay, Lake Michigan" with John Brazner (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency in Duluth) in The American Midland Naturalist, 143(1): 250-256. Free copies are available from Sea Grant by calling 726-6191.

Jeff Gunderson, associate director, helped facilitate and teach three seafood safety courses held at Washburn Hall in December: a Seafood Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point (HACCP) Encore training, a seafood sanitation training, and a Seafood HACCP course. The courses, sanctioned by the Association of Food and Drug Officials and the Seafood HACCP Alliance, trained and certified both state seafood inspectors and seafood processors. Gunderson received funding for and facilitated a yellow perch fish producers
forum in Hudson, Wisconsin, in January. Fifty yellow perch producers from around the U.S. and Ontario gathered to share information, identify research needs, and hear about current research results. The forum was sponsored by the North Central Regional Aquaculture Center and Minnesota Sea Grant.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS - February 9 - March 5
Wednesday, February 9
Head of the Lakes Job Fair, 2 p.m., Ballroom.
"Talking About Racism: Confronting the Issue and Building Alliances," 7 p.m., Ballroom.
Theatre, Man of the Moment, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Thursday, February 10
Head of the Lakes Job Fair, 10 a.m., Ballroom.
International Brown Bag: "Landscapes in Britain," noon, Bullpub.
Geology Seminar: "A Numerical Approach to Simulating Mixed Flow in Karst Aquafiers," 4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Theatre, Man of the Moment, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Friday, February 11
Women's Hockey vs Minnesota, 7 p.m., DECC.
Theatre, Man of the Moment, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Saturday, February 12
Women's Hockey vs Minnesota, 7 p.m., DECC.
Theatre, Man of the Moment, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Tuesday, February 15
Advanced Storytelling Workshop, 6 - 9 p.m., 119 Sports and Health Center Room.
Jazz at 8: Guitar Ensemble and Combo II, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Wednesday, February 16
Artist Lecture Series: Glenna Shrimpton, papermaker and printmaker, 10 a.m., Tweed.
University for Seniors Lecture: "Buddhism: Plain and Simple," 1:15 p.m., Bullpub.
Safety Awareness Fair, Ballrooms A and B.
Anthropolgy Seminar: "Attitudes Toward Sled Dogs," 3:30 p.m., 224 Cina.
Panel discussion: "African Americans and Africans: A Dialogue About our Roots," 6 p.m., Kirby Rafters.

Thursday, February 17
International Brown Bag: "The International Criminal Court," noon, Bullpub.
Geology Seminar: "The Baraboo Quartzite: A New Look at an Old Topic," 4 p.m., 185 LSci.

Friday, February 18
Women's Basketball vs Winona State, 5:30 p.m., Romano Gym.
Men's Basketball vs Winona State, 7:30 p.m., Romano Gym.
Saturday, February 19
Women's Basketball vs Concordia University, 5:30 p.m., Romano Gym.
Soul Food Dinner, 6 p.m., Ballroom.
Men's Basketball vs Concordia University, 7:30 p.m., Romano Gym.
Guest Artists New York Chamber Musicians: "The Seasons," 7:30 p.m., MPAC.

Monday, February 21
Symphony Orchestra Concert, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Tuesday, February 22
Combo I and Vocal Jazz Ensemble, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Wednesday, February 23
University for Seniors Lecture: "Russia: Prospects and Dilemas," 1:15 p.m., Rafters.
Jazz at 8: Jazz Ensemble I & II, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Thursday, February 24
International Brown Bag: "Exploring Links with Rural Women in Costa Rica," noon, Ballroom A.
Geology Seminar: "From ALVIN and Oman to Seafloor Observations: The Future of Mid-Ocean Ridge 'Black Smoker Studies,'" 4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Wind Ensemble Concert, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Friday, February 25
Men's Hockey vs Alaska Anchorage, 7 p.m., DECC.

Saturday, February 26
Men's Hockey vs Alaska Anchorage, 7 p.m., DECC.

Sunday, February 27
Choral Concert: University Singers, Concert Chorale and Chamber Singers, 3 p.m., First Lutheran Church.

Tuesday, February 29
Faculty Art Song Recital: Rachel Inselman, soprano, 7 p.m., MPAC.

Thursday, March 2
International Brown Bag: "Health Care in Petrozavodsk, Karelia, Russia: A Humanitarian Aid Project," noon, Rafters.
Geology Seminar: "Glaciers and Climate: Why I Spent my Summers Chasing Winter in the Swedish Arctic" 4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Theatre, Samuel Beckett: An Evening of 4 Short Plays, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Friday, March 3
Men's Hockey vs Minnesota State-Mankato, 7 p.m., DECC.
Theatre, Samuel Beckett: An Evening of 4 Short Plays, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Saturday, March 4
Men's Hockey vs Minnesota State-Mankato, 7 p.m., DECC.
Theatre, Samuel Beckett: An Evening of 4 Short Plays, 8 p.m., MPAC.

Sunday, March 5
Theatre, Samuel Beckett: An Evening of 4 Short Plays, 8 p.m., MPAC.

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