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THIS ISSUE POSTED MARCH 21, 2000
CURRENTS VOLUME 17, ISSUE 14
To submit material to Currents, e-mail currents@d.umn.edu
TWEED MUSEUM NEWS
A variety of original prints created at two university-affiliated print
studios called "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" is currently on display through
April 2.
The exhibit "Highlights from the Collection: Masters of Watercolor"
runs from March 21 - April 30. The Tweed Museum presents a historical
survey featuring examples from the collection, including works by
Elizabeth Nourse, Gilbert Munger, Charles Burchfield, Millard Sheets, John
Marin, Walt Kuhn, Harold Gregor, Cheng Khee Chee and recently acquired
works by Warrington Colescott. This exhibition is curated by members of
the Lake Superior Watercolor Society in conjunction with Tweed Museum
staff, as a Community Curators Project.
The "Highlights from the Collection: Masters of Watercolor" reception
will be held from 5 p.m. - 7 p.m., on Tuesday, March 21 in the Tweed
Museum Balcony Gallery.
The Tweed Museum will present "The Figure in Contemporary Sculpture"
March 21 - May 14. This group exhibition features artists from the
midwest, representing traditional and innovative approaches to making
figurative sculpture.
An Artist Lecture by Judy Onofrio.
will be held at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 25.
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 Rhodes at 726-7823.
In conjunction with its exhibition "The Figure in Contemporary
Sculpture" the Tweed Museum of Art announces the "North Shore Iron Pour."
This workshop offers a rare regional opportunity to create an original
sculpture using the iron casting process. The workshop will be
co-facilitated by three artist/teachers who have extensive experience with
the ancient art of iron casting: Coral Penelope Lambert, a native of
England, is in the U.S. on an "Artist of
Exceptional Merit" visa, teaching and giving workshops all over the
country; James Brenner, of Minneapolis and Chicago, an artist whose cast
iron works have been exhibited widely; and Jeff Kalstrom of Duluth, who
has participated in numerous iron pours and has received several major
public sculpture commissions. Workshop participants do not need an
extensive background or education in art or sculpture but do need to be
able to create a sculptural positive out of clay, which will then be cast
using a two-part mold. Azcon Corporation of Duluth will donate one ton of
iron,which will be melted down in a portable furnace on April 15th,
filling the molds
created by workshop participants.
The workshop schedule includes a pre-workshop session at 7 p.m. on
April 4. A Sculpture Studio will be held 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. on April 8 in
145 ABAH, from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. on April 15 outside at UMD and at 10 a.m.
on April 19 outside at UMD. Call Mary Rhodes at (218) 726-7823 to receive
a registration form.
PHILOSOPHY COLLOQUIUM
The Department of Philosophy presents a colloquium by Jason Baumgarth on
"Tradition and Modern Meaning: Society and Relative Truth an Extension of
Existentialism" at 3:15 p.m. on Wednesday, March 22 in 245 ABAH.
ANTHROPOLOGY SEMINAR
The fifth Anthropology seminar will be held on Wednesday March 22 at 3:15
p.m. in 214 Cina. Edith Dunn, graduate student in the
Interdisciplinary
Archaeological Studies program, will present "Umm El-Jimal: Interpreting
Byzantine Architecture of the Hauran." The seminar is free and open to the
public.
ALWORTH INSTITUTE ANNUAL MEMORIAL LECTURE
The Twentieth Century gave us the phenomenon of Total War and the ability
to blow ourselves to kingdom-come several times over. It also gave us the
first systematic attempts to build a system of perpetual peace and
peacekeeping, a way of keeping a lid on smoldering disputes until reason
or virtue prevailed. Hear Professor Alan James, author of The Politics of
Peacekeeping and Peace-keeping in International Politics, as he presents
the Annual Royal D. Alworth, Jr. Memorial Lecture titled "Keeping the
Peace in the 20th Century" at 7:30 p.m. on March 22 in the Ballroom. His
talk is free and open to the public and will be followed by a
reception.
WOMEN'S HISTORY MONTH
Stop by to share in the food, fun and company at the WRAC "Celebrating
Women" Open House. Help celebrate women and their accomplishments both now
and in the past. This event will begin at 10 a.m. on March 23 in 193 Kirby
Student Center.
SPRING GEOLOGY SEMINARS
All seminars will take place on Thursdays at 4 p.m. in 185 Life Science.
Refreshments are served at 3:45 p.m.
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, Manager 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, will present "Modeling Wellhead Capture
Zones in Different Stratigraphic Settings: Four Examples From Cass County,
Minnesota."
BIOLOGY SPRING SEMINARS
All seminars will be held in at 3:30 p.m. in 175 Life Science. Coffee and
cookies are served at 3:15 p.m.
On March 24 Sagar Goyal, professor and chair, Veterinary Diagnostic
Laboratory, University of Minnesota, will present "Viruses in Water."
On April 7 Karen Noyce, MN-DNR Minnesota, will present "Black Bear
Research."
On April 14 Gopi Podila, professor of Biology, Michigan Technological
University, will present "Basic Research to Biotechnology: A Tree
Perspective."
On April 21 Dr. Raghotma, Purdue, will present "Transcriptional
Regulation of Phosphate Acquisition in Plants."
On April 28 Aubie Shaw will present "Metastatic Breast Cancer:
Regulation of Osteoclast Differentiation by Growth Factors."
GLENSHEEN CRAFTSMAN ERA PROGRAM
On Saturday, March 25 from 9 - 11 a.m. Glensheen will offer a program and
tour about the Craftsman Era. Glensheen's education and volunteer
coordinator, Rachael Martin, will present the history and philosophy of
the Craftsman Era, also known as the Arts and Crafts Movement. Numerous
examples of this style are incorporated into the decor at Glensheen. The
program includes a tour of the third floor to see examples of the 1908
original craftsman furnishings and background information about the
movement's revival.
The tour is $15 per person and includes refreshments.To make
reservations, call Glensheen at 726-8910.
ARTIST LECTURE SERIES
Kay Kurt, who lives in Duluth and paints candy as her metaphor, will speak
at 6:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 4 in Tweed. Her work has been exhibited at
the Hayward Gallery in London, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Kornblee
Gallery, the Whitney Museum in the Whitney Biennial, the Corcoran Gallery
and Louis K. Meisel Galleries in New York, the Walker Art Center, the
Minnesota Museum of Art, and Joy Kops Gallery, among others. Her work is
in the collections of the Corcoran, the Metropolitan, the Whitney, and the
Walker. She has been a Bush Artist Fellowship recipient. Kurt serves as
one of the two jurors for the Annual Art Student Exhibition in Tweed in
2000.
Bill Johnson, Vice President, Creative Services of Sony Music
Nashville will speak at 2 p.m on Thursday, April 6 in the Tweed Museum
Lecture Gallery. He has been with Sony Music for the past twenty-one
years, making art and music coalesce, and creating a strong, cohesive, yet
distinctive look for one of the most diverse rosters in country music. He
has served in the past as Assistant Art Director for Rolling Stone
magazine. Johnson has received two New York Typographer's Awards, two
Grammy awards, multiple Print magazine Design of Excellence awards, as
well as a Graphis Selection among many other honors. He now works with
conceptualizing the covers, trade and consumer advertising, point of
purchase, direct mail marketing, and publicity design for Sony Music
Nashville. Johnson serves as one of the two jurors for the Annual Art
Student Exhibition in Tweed in 2000.
INT'L 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 April 6 the slide presentation "A Tourist's View of Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos" will take place in the Rafters. Mary Carlson, UMD
alumna, fulfilled a dream by visiting Southeast Asia. She will show us the
beauty of the area, the impact of the French colonial period and ancient
Angkor Wat in Cambodia, off limits to most foreigners for years.
On April 13 the presentation "Life in Modern Turkey: Cultural and
Political Issues" will take place in the Rafters. Cennet Engin Demir,
instructor at the Middle East Technical University Department of
Educational Sciences, Ankara, Turkey, is a visiting scholar at UMD. Demir
will give an update on how people are coping with the recent devastating
earthquakes.
On April 20 the presentation "Newfoundland: Complaints is Many and
Various, But the Odd Devil Likes It" will take place in the Bullpub. A
love of wild places and author Annie Proulx's The Shipping News lured
Linda and Jim Belote, faculty members in UMD's department of
sociology-anthropology, to Newfoundland in 1997. Icebergs, whales and
great Newfound-landers drew them back again in 1999.
On April 27 the presentation "Paricutn, an Infant Volcano in Central
Mexico" will take place in the Bullpub. Pat Farrell, assistant professor
in the Department of Geography, and Tomas Weidmer-Ocampo, instructor in
the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, hope to lead a
student
group to this region of Mexico to see the sights, including a volcano.
VIRTUAL JOB FAIR
UMD Career Services is sponsoring a Virtual Job Fair from April 10-17.
Find a job or an internship using the computer. It's free, fast and
convenient. For more information contact Career Services at
carserv@d.umn.edu or stop in 21 Campus Center.
LATIN AMERICAN AWARENESS
11TH ANNUAL FIESTA
On Wednesday, April 12 at 7 p.m. see the theater performance of "Voices of
Corn" in Kirby Ballroom.
"Voices of Corn" presents the human struggle for freedom across the
Americas and honors indigenous resistance to colonialism. Emiliano Silva,
who studied theater at the University of Chile and Cherolyn Fisher, a
member of the Andean band Group Nawi lead this bilingual group with
poetry, puppets, music and tales about Mexican Hero Emiliano Zapata and
today's Zapatistas of Chiapas. The presentation draws text of Bartolome de
las Casas, Eduardo Galeano,Subcomandante Marcos, Noam Chomsky and Howard
Zinn. This event is free and open to the public.
On Wednesday, April 19 at 7 p.m. see the slide presentation "Colombia
Update" by Dick Bancroft in 120 Campus Center. Bancroft is a photographer
for the International Indian Treaty Council and a speaker from the
Resource Center of the Americas in Minneapolis. He has traveled
extensively throughout Mexico, Central America, Ecuador, Cuba and Colombia
photo documenting the daily lives of indigenous people of the Western
Hemisphere. This event is free and open to the public.
On Saturday, April 22 at 6 p.m. join the 11th Annual Fiesta in Kirby
Ballroom. There will be a buffet dinner, music, entertainment and a dance.
Music will be by Sabor Tropical. Tickets will go on sale April 3. General
tickets are $15 and students and children are $10. The dance starts at
8:30 p.m. and tickets for the dance only are $5.
For more information contact Susana Pelayo-Woodward at 726 8444.
HOLOCAUST LECTURE
This year's Baeumler-Kaplan Holocaust Commemoration Lecture Series
features a discussion by Dr. Leonard Dinnerstein of the Moriah Films
production The Long Way Home at 7 p.m. on Sunday, April 16 in the Kirby
Ballroom and a lecture by Dinnerstein at 7 p.m. on Monday, April 17 in the
Marshall Performing Arts Center. There will be a credit option that
corresponds with Dinnerstein's presentations offered by Alexis
Pogorelskin. Funding is provided in part by the Minnesota Humanities
Commission. For more information about the credit option, contact: Pauline
Nuhring at 726
6361, pnuhring@d. umn.edu.
SUMMER YOUTH CAMPS
The camps are for ages 9-16 and run from 8:30 - 5 p.m., Monday -
Friday.
There will be rock climbing, sea kayaking, canoeing, hiking and much
more! An Arts and the Environment Camp will be from July 10 - 14. An
Outdoor Adventure Camp for Teens will be held from July 24 - 28. An
Outdoor Adventure Camp for Kids will be held from August 7-11.
CAMPUS NEWS
FACULTY MARCHING IN GRADUATION CEREMONIES
Last year we had the largest faculty attendance ever, and we invite all
faculty to participate this year. There will be two commencement
ceremonies this year. Undergraduate Student Commencement will be on
Saturday, May 13 at noon in the Duluth Entertainment & Convention Center
(DECC). Graduate Student
Commencement will be on Thursday, May 11 at 7 p.m. in the Romano Gym. Each
ceremony is expected to last two hours.
Faculty who plan to march in commencement ceremonies should call
the
University Relations Office at 726-7110 before April 7. The following
information is needed: 1) Full name and full title (professor, associate
professor,
assistant professor, instructor) 2) Department name 3) Which commencement
ceremony(s) you plan to march in (undergraduate, graduate, or both) 4)
your email and yourphone number.
Tickets for faculty guests for Saturday's ceremony will not be
assigned unless they are requested from the University Relations Office by
April
7. If you do not have a cap and gown, they can be ordered from UMD
Campus
Books. The ordering deadline is April 7. Complete and turn in the order
form you received to UMD Campus Books, or call UMD Campus Books at
726-7286 for ordering information. As in the past, expenses for rental of
caps and gowns will be covered centrally.
BEST CEHSP FACULTY
A new faculty recognition program for outstanding CEHSP faculty has been
established. Two faculty members will be selected and each will receive a
$500 stipend. Faculty and students may nominate. For the criteria and
nomination form visit the CEHSP Student Affairs or Deans office or any
CEHSP department office. Nominations are due April 7.
ART STUDENT WINS AWARD
Senior UMD Art major Carrie Kohlmeier has been named a finalist in the
Best of College Photography 2000 student competition. Kohlmeier's work
will be published in their annual book. Jurors were Armando Flores from
Nikon, Linda Lowell from Brooks Institute of Photography, and Laura
Lasworth, Art Center College of Design. Congratulations!
TKE NEEDS FACULTY ADVISOR
The men of Tau Kappa Epsilon (TKE) Fraternity are looking for faculty
and/or staff members for fraternity advisors. TKE is a new organization
dedicated to brotherhood, scholarship and charity. Advising includes
occasional meetings (no more than one per month) to help them direct their
future on the UMD campus. For more information contact: TKE President Jeff
Grabow, jgrabow@d.umn.edu, 724-9058.
CURRENTS SCHEDULE
Currents is printed regularly throughout the school year. The remaining
Spring 2000 schedule is:
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.
ART ADVENTURES IN ITALY
University College Duluth will sponsor "Art and Experience" in the rural
historic heart of Italy for two weeks during summer pre-session. Robert
Repinski will instruct the group, whose objective will be to create a
visual log of the trip using sketching, painting, rubbings, printmaking
and other techniques. Everyone is welcome, regardless of experience. For
more information, contact Pauline Nuhring at 726-6361.
NEWS FROM UMD STORES
CAMPUS BOOKS EVENTS:
The last day to return Spring Semester textbooks with receipt and proof of
class cancellation is Friday, March 27. The last day to purchase Spring
Semester textbooks is Friday, March 27. There will be a color film
Enlargement Special from Monday, March 20 through Friday, March 24. Some
film is not included.The General Book Area will be closed for a special
inventory on Friday, March 24. From Monday, April 10 through Friday, April
14 there will be a color film Reprint Special. Some film is not included.
LIFE FITNESS
Buy a 7-week Life Fitness pass and attend all Life Fitness classes offered
through May 5. The cost is $35 for faculty/student pass holders and $45
for others. Also, a Ten Class Pass may be purchased for $30 which entitles
you to attend any 10 classes within one year of purchase. Stop by the
Recreational Sports office at 121 SpHC or call 726-7128.
TWEED SALE
Beginning March 21 and running through May 5, the Tweed Museum Store is
holding "The Amazing Sale!" You'll find 30%-40%-50% off
storewide! Visit the store website at http://www.d.umn.edu/tma and email
your order to tma@d.umn.edu.
FACULTY AND
STAFF NEWS
Mustafa al'Absi, assistant professor, Department of Behavioral
Sciences,
presented a talk titled "Enhanced Cortisol Responses to Public-Speaking in
Hypertension-Prone Men and Women" at the annual meeting of the Society for
Psychosomatic Medicine, which was held in Savannah, Georgia this month. At
that conference he received a "Citation" for the paper titled "Blood
Pressure But not Parental History for Hypertension Predicts Pain
Perception in Women." A paper is selected as a citation presentation if it
receives "excellent" ratings by reviewers. He also chaired a session at
the Psychosomatic Medicine meeting titled "Stress, Psychological Status
and Disease" and he chaired a roundtable discussion on "hypertension and
pain sensitivity as an etiologic and diagnostic marker."
Annette L. Boman, assistant professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, along with J. Kuai, R. S. Arnold, X. Zhu, and R. A. Kahn recently published a research article entitled "Effects of Activated ARF on Golgi Morphology Require Neither Activation of PLD1 nor Recruitment of COP I" in the Journal of Biological Chemistry, Volume 275, pages 4022 4032 (2000).
Gloria DeFilipps Brush, professor and head, Department of Art, has work
in
the "Photography 2000" exhibition, opening March 29 and running through
April 22 at Nexus Gallery, an artists' cooperative in New York. Robin Rice
of the Robin Rice Gallery in New York selected the work.
Joyce Grahn, professor Emeritus, Management Studies, and James Vileta, UMD
Library, presented New Library Electronic Technology to Enhance
Instruction and Class Research, at the 36th annual Midwest Business
Administration Association meeting, in Chicago in March.
Pam Griffin, UMD Access Center, has been selected to work with the
University of Washington in Seattle on a federally funded project, DO-IT
Prof, to improve the knowledge and skills of post-secondary faculty and
administrators in order to make them better prepared to fully include
students with disabilities in academic programs on their
campuses. DO-IT Prof will create and deliver at least six models of
professional development over the next 3 years and will work with a
project team from twenty colleges and universities.
Joyce Kramer, professor, Department of Social Work, with the help of Nolan E. Penn, John F. Skinner, Roberto J. Velasquez, Barbara W. K. Lee, Letticia M. Arellano and Joyce P. Williams, have written a chapter entitled "Health Practices and Health-Care Systems Among Cultural Groups." The chapter appears in the Handbook of Gender, Culture and Health, R. M. Eisler and M. Hersen eds., Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers, 2000.
Joseph R. Prohaska, professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, was recently awarded a Grant-in-Aid for Research from the University of Minnesota Graduate School in the amount of $22,122. His grant is entitled "Role of Altered Dopamine-beta Monooxygenase in Abnormal Brain Development of Copper-Deficient Rats."
Kendall B. Wallace, professor, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, was invited to present a seminar entitled Adriamycin induced Mitochondrial Cardiomyopathy: A Pore Way to Die to the Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology at Michigan State University in February.
NRRI NEWS
Subhash Basak has recently completely and published two book chapters:
"Information Theoretic Indices of Neighborhood Complexity and Their
Applications," in Topological Indices and Related Descriptors in QSAR
and
QSPR, J. Devillers and A.T. Balaban, Eds., Gordon and Breach Science
Publishers, The Netherlands, pp. 563-593 (1999) and "A Hierarchical
Approach to the Development of QSAR Models Using Topological, Geometrical
and Quantum Chemical Parameters, Brian Gute and Greg Grunwald," in
Topological Indices and Related Descriptors in QSAR and QSPR, J. Devillers
and A.T. Balaban, Eds., Gordon and Breach Science Publishers, The
Netherlands, pp. 675-696 (1999).
Subhash Basak, Denise Mills and Milan Randic, presented a paper "On
the Use of Variable Connectivity Index for Characterization of Amino
Acids" at the 40th Sanibel Symposium on atomic, molecular, biophysical and
condensed matter theory organized by the Quantum Theory Project, recently
at the University of Florida.
CALENDAR OF EVENTS - March 21 - April 21
Tuesday, March 21
"Highlights from the Collection: Masters of Watercolor" reception, 5 p.m.
Tweed Museum Balcony Gallery.
Tweed Concert Series: UMD Faculty: Music Through the Ages, 7:30 p.m.,
Tweed.
Wednesday, March 22
Philosophy Colloquium: "Society and Relative Truth and Extention of
Existentialism," 3:15 p.m., 245 ABAH.
Anthopology Seminar: "Umm El-Jimal: Interpreting Byzantine Architecture of
the Hauran," 3:15 p.m., 214 Cina.
Royal D. Alworth Jr. Memorial Lecture: "Keeping Peace in the 20th
Century," 7:30 p.m., Ballroom.
Thursday, March 23
Women's History Month: "Celebrating Women Open House - WRAC," 10 a.m., 193
Kirby.
Geology Seminar: "Sequence Stratigraphy of Lake Basins: Unraveling the
Influence of Climate and Tectonics," 4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Friday, March 24
Biology Seminar: "Viruses in Water," 3:30 p.m., 175 LSci.
Saturday, March 25
Glensheen Craftsman Era Program, 9 a.m., Glensheen.
Monday, April 1
Women's Tennis: Bemidji State, Fieldhouse
Women's Tennis: April 1 Michigan Tech, Fieldhouse.
Tuesday, April 4
Artist Lecture Series: Kay Kurt, 6:30 p.m., Tweed
Northshore Iron Pour: 7 p.m., Tweed.
Thursday, April 6
Women's Tennis: St. Cloud State, Fieldhouse.
International Brown Bag: "A Tourist's View of Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos,"
noon, Rafters.
Artist Lecture Series: Bill Johnson, Sony Music Nashville, 2 p.m, Tweed
Museum Lecture Gallery.
Geology Seminar: "Preparing Geology Majors for the Future: An Alternative
Curriculum Model," 4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Friday, April 7
Biology Seminar: "Black Bear Research," 3:30 p.m., 175 LSci.
Saturday, April 8
Northshore Iron Pour: Sculpture Studio, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., 145 ABAH.
Sunday, April 9
Northshore Iron Pour: Sculpture Studio, 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., 145 ABAH.
Monday, April 10
Virtual Job Fair
Tuesday, April 11
Virtual Job Fair
Tweed Concert Series: Cavani String Quartet, 7:30 p.m., Tweed.
Wednesday, April 12
Virtual Job Fair.
Latin American Awareness Celebration: "Voices of Corn," 7 p.m., Kirby
Ballroom.
Thursday, April 13
Virtual Job Fair.
International Brown Bag: "Life in Modern Turkey: Cultural and Political
Issues," noon, Rafters.
Geology Seminar: "Upper Cambrian Facies and Events From Across Laurentia,"
4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Friday, April 14
Virtual Job Fair.
Biology Seminar: "Basic Research to Biotechnology: A Tree Perspective,"
3:30 p.m., 175 LSci.
Saturday, April 15
Women's Tennis: Winona State, Fieldhouse
Virtual Job Fair.
Northshore Iron Pour: Sculpture Studio, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m., Outside.
Sunday, April 16
Virtual Job Fair
Baeumler-Kaplan Holocaust Commemoration Lecture: The Long Way Home, 7
p.m., Kirby Ballroom.
Monday, April 17
Virtual Job Fair.
Baeumler-Kaplan Holocaust Commemoration Lecture: Leonard Dinnerstein, 7
p.m., MPAC.
Tuesday, April 18
Women's Tennis: St. Scholastica, Fieldhouse.
Men's Tennis: Minnesota-Morris, Fieldhouse.
Tweed Concert Series: First Annual New Music Festival, 7:30 p.m.,
Tweed.
Wednesday, April 19
Men's Tennis: Minnesota-Morris, Fieldhouse.
Northshore Iron Pour: Sculpture Studio, 10 a.m., Outside.
Baseball: Mount Senario College, 1 p.m., Bulldog Park.
Latin American Awareness Celebration: "Columbia Update," 7 p.m., 120
CCtr.
Tweed Concert Series: First Annual New Music Festival, 7:30 p.m.,
Tweed.
Thursday, April 20
Alworth Brown Bag: "Newfoundland" noon, Bullpub.
Geology Seminar: "The Oil and Gas Industry: Its History, Socioeconomic
Impact, Some Methods and Case Examples," 4 p.m., 185 LSci.
Tweed Concert Series: First Annual New Music Festival, 7:30 p.m.,
Tweed.
Friday, April 21
Baseball: Northern State, 1:30 p.m., Bulldog Park.
Biology Seminar: "Transcriptional Regulation of Phosphate Acquisition in
Plants," 3:30 p.m., 175 LSci.
Saturday, April 22
Baseball: noon, Minnesota-Morris, Bulldog Park
Latin American Awareness Celebration: 11th Annual Fiesta, 6 p.m., Kirby
Ballroom.
Tuesday, April 25
Baseball: 2 p.m., Wisconsin-Superior, Bulldog Park
Artist Lecture: Judy Onofrio, 6:30 p.m., Tweed.
Thursday, April 27
Alworth Brown Bag: "Paricutn, an Infant Volcano in Central Mexico," noon,
Bullpub.
Geology Seminar: "Modeling Wellhead Capture Zones in Different
Stratigraphic Settings: Four Examples From Cass County, Minnesota," 4
p.m., 185 LSci.
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