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Grand Valley State UniversityScholarWorks@GVSU
1985-1986, Volume 10 Grand Valley Forum, 1976-
11-18-1985
Grand Valley Forum, volume 010, number 16,November 18, 1985Grand Valley State University
Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/forum10
Part of the Archival Science Commons, Education Commons, and the History Commons
This News Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Grand Valley Forum, 1976- at ScholarWorks@GVSU. It has been accepted forinclusion in 1985-1986, Volume 10 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@GVSU. For more information, please [email protected].
Recommended CitationGrand Valley State University, "Grand Valley Forum, volume 010, number 16, November 18, 1985" (1985). 1985-1986, Volume 10. 16.http://scholarworks.gvsu.edu/forum10/16
) .
Monday, November 18, 1985
Coming Events Sonora Band on caapus Rest weekend
The third annual GVSC Honors Band will draw area high school juniors and seniors to campus on Saturday and Sunday, November 23 and 24. The event will include individual clinics presented by the GVSC music faculty and orientation sessions featuring some of the Grand Valley ensembles. William Root, conductor of the Grand Valley bands, will direct the Honors Band in a concert to be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, November 24, in the Calder Fine Arts Center. Admission is free.
Speaker to Address Holistic Life View
Michael Ryce, a promoter of holistic health, will speak on that subject in a talk entitled •why Is This Happening to Me Again?" on Friday, November 22, from l to 2:15 p.m. in Kirkhof Center, Portside Room. The speech will be repeated at 7:30 p.m. at the Grand Haven Community Center. ·
Showcase Concert Slated for Wednesday
•Musical Montage,• a showcase of GVSC musical groups, will be presented on Wednesday, November 20, at 8 p.m. in the Louis Armstrong Theatre.
Groups to be featured include the wind ensemble,
The Grand Valley rorua is published by the Public Relations Office. Publication schedule is every Monday when classes are in session during fall and winter seaesters, and every ot~er Monday during the spring/su-er session. Copy deadline is the Tuesday noon prior to publication. All materials should be sent to Sharon Coeling, editor, Public Relations Office, 26 zumberge Library, GVSC, Allendale, MI, 49401. Telephone: 895-3221.
Vol. 10 No. 16
French horn quartet, Laker Marching Band, clarinet choir, saxophone ensemble, and brass quartet. Two vocal groups, the varsity Men and Music in Motion, will also perform. Featured soloist will be clarinetist Paul Grischke, associate professor of music at Grand Valley State, who will play George Gershwin's •summertime.•
Group selections will include •Gimme Some Lovin,• featuring five jazz drummers, the marching band playing some of their most popular halftime numbers, and the trombone sextet playing a new arrangement of •When the Saints Go Marching In.•
•Music Montage• is under the direction of William Root. Admission to the concert is $1 at the door.
Medical Career Day To be Beld TUesday
Medical Career Day will be held on Tuesday, November 19, from 12 noon to 3 p.m. in Kirkhof Center. Approximately 60 representatives from hospitals, health care agencies, the armed forces, and governmental units will be on hand to provide career information to students. The event is sponsored by the Placement Office.
Across Campus Play Auditions Scheduled
The School of Communications will hold auditions for its winter semester play~ •When You Comin Back Red Ryder,• by Mark Medoff, this week. There are roles for three women and five men. Tom Hamilton will direct the play. Performances are scheduled between January 31 and February 15. Following is a schedule of audition times and dates.
Thursday, Nov. 21, 4-7 p.m. Friday, Nov. 22, 2-7 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 23, 3-6 p.m. Auditions will be held in
Louis Armstrong Theatre. No rehearsals will be held during the Christmas break.
Grand Valley State College
Alcohol W.nageaent Certification Seainar To be Offered
A seminar to make liquor licenses and liquor establishment employees more aware of the effects of alcohol will be offered on campus Friday, November 22.
The Techniques of Alcohol Management (T.A.M.) seminar will include a certification examination at the end of the six-hour session. A requirement for such certification for liquor licensees and employees, including bartenders, retail clerks, food servers, and caterers, is currently pending in the Michigan State Legislature. The proposed legislation is aimed at reducing the liability of licensees and thus also reducing insurance costs. The T,A.M. seminar was designed by the Michigan Licensed Beverage Association.
The GVSC Hospitality Management Association, a student organization, is sponsoring the event. The seminar will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. on November 22 in Kirkhof Center. Cost is $25 per person and is payable at registration, which will begin at 9:30 a.m.
(Continued on page 2)
Sorority Solicits Donations For Auction
Chi Omega Delta sorority is seeking donations for a campus-wide auction to be held on Wednesday, December 4. Funds raised will be donated to the Santa Claus Girls and the Allendale Care Center.
Faculty or staff who wish to donate an item or service should contact Jackie Lovejoy at 895-7925 or the Student Activities Office, ext. 3295. Media Services Adds Rew Video Bquipaent
Media Services has added five VHS (1/2 inch) videocassette players to its inventory of equipment for
(Continued on page 2)
Faculty Sketches Theodore Berland, associate
professor of communications, gave three presentations at the annual meeting of the American Medical Writers Association held in Montreal from OctQber 30 to November 2. The titles of his speeches were: •Marketing Yourself and Your Wor~,· Asserting Yourself as a Writer,• and "Marketing Your Manuscript." Berland is a past president of the American Medical Writers Association.
Coming Events (Continued from page 1)
GVSC Club to Feature Talk on Terrorisa
The GVSC Club will host a luncheon on Wednesday, November 20, at which Professor Jonathan White will speak on "Right Wing Terrorism and the
Across Campus (Continued from page 1)
classroom use. The units complement the closed-circuit video system on campus.
Bob Lucas, Director of Media Services, said there were several reasons for adding the individual playback units. •Increasing faculty demand, faculty feedback on a recent survey, and effective and creative faculty application and use of video technology convinced us of the need for the new equipment," he said. Lucas also cited a continuing shift from the use of 16 mm film to video and a steady decrease in the price of video equipment as incentives for purchasing the new units. Use of the five new players is limited to classroom instruction.
Early Forua Deadline
Because of the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, information to be included in
Richard Gonce, professor of economics, served as a discussant at the symposium, •Frank e. Knight (1885-1972): A Reappraisal of His Intellectual Contributions," held at the University of Chicago November 7-9.
An article entitled •Managing Problem Employees," by Jitendra Mishra, professor of management, appeared in the September issue of Indian Management, India's leading management journal. The
Threat to Democracy." White has done extensive research and writing on the subject and his speech will focus on the changes in warfare since World War II, the future of warfare, and evidence of the threat of right-wing terrorism in this country.
the December 2 issue of the Forum must be in the Public
News Notes
page 2
publication has accepted two additional articles by Mishra, entitled •women in Management" and "Organizational Implications of Quality Circles."
Lillian Sigal, visiting instructor of English, moderated an interreligious symposium entitled "Women in the Rabbinate, Priesthood and Ministry" as part of the scholar-in-residence weekend held at Congregation Ahavas Israel in Grand Rapids on November 16.
The event will be held in Kirkhof Center's Portside Room with lunch beginning at 11:30 a.m. and the talk at 12:05 p.m. Attendees may purchase lunch in the Galley or bring their own. Beverages will be furnished by the Food Service. No reservations are needed.
Relations Office by noon on Monday, November 25.
FACTS IN BRIEF More Bachelor's Degrees are Awarded
in Career-Specific Fields
• In 19112-33. 969.504 boclwlor'1 d"!Pff' ''"'"' awardod. 0-.U. 11w number of d"IPff1 awuded ho1 ~ tittl< In 11w IHt -·· T'M 1912-33 total ttp,ftfflts a S pe<fflt - on, tho 1972-73 Ii~.
• lut 11w nwnber of - ·· d"IPff1 awudod in ~ lidd1 conbnued to itlcftH• dunng this period. whU. in fields such H th• todol --tho numbff d«dinod.
--Ounng th• liw y.ars- 1917-78 ""d 1'182-13. tho numbftof degrftla-rdod in bulinnaand ,nonagetnffll incttased l!IO pen:mt; in the LIit ~•r in· CIURI tn thil nold - moclffat,, (S pe<ffl!J. --F.Wfl stud.nts an- Hmi~ df'gf'ft'S 1n tM todal Id,. fflCI! dlKipliMS; bmwftn 1981-32 and 1982-33. tho nwnber of soaal oc:wna ~ awardod cHCl'NMd ftom 99,545 to 95.0M. In tho lost h..., ...,an tho num· be, ot d,gr,n awardod 1n thno lwlds dKhnod 16 p,r· Cft\t .
• ~ aw1rdf'd in th!' human1bN Nlv~ rnna1ntd ttloliffly stoblo. although in tho lost yur th• numbar of d .. gr<ft awardod dochMd 3 perttnt.
• 8otwftn 1917-78 and 1982-33. tho number of bacholor, dogftft awarded in rduCAhOn dKknod 28 p,,nnl.
Tlril """'" - COffl,-ld ~ C«ilio °"'""'· - """""' io, tltt °""'°' o/ Po/IOI A..i .. ,. arwl - . A.....,.• eo,,.,,1 OIi u-,-· fur-, ,.,.,._t.,. aal/ 12021 ,J!Hf5Z .
Bachelor's Degrees by Field of Study
Computer and Info. Seim«
Hftlth Profftsions
HumanitiH
EdUCAtion
Bull:IWII and M1nagnrwn1
-24.SOb
r---i 3).5"4
b-4 .61 6
I 51.26.5
72 .248
I m .5311
91.151
I 1"4.21
97.991
I 156.161
95 .0M
I 116.IIJO
221U92
D 1m.73 • 1982-33
Soun-t: NatK>nal Crnter tor Eduanon Stati9t:ics
(
..
Calendar of Events Tuesday, November 5, through Friday, November 29
10 a.m.-5 p.m.: Art exhibit. Richard Sutton, painter-sculptor and Hillary c. Burns, metalsmith, visiting professors in the Department of Art and Design. Calder Art Gallery.
Monday, November 18 12 noon: Lunchbreak. Banish Misfortune, music from the
Renaissance and Middle Ages to Jazz. Free. Louis Armstrong Theatre.
Tuesday, .November 19 12 noon-3 p.m.: Medical Career Day. Kirkhof Center.
Wednesday, November 20 11:30 a.m.: GVSC Club Luncheon. Professor Jonathan White on
•Right Wing Terrorism and the Threat to Democracy.• Portside Room, Kirkhof Center. ·
8 p.m.: Concert. •Musical Montage.• William Root, director. Louis Armstrong Theatre. Admission, $1.
Thursday, November 21 12 noon: Lunchbreak. Quink, vocal ensemble. Free. Louis
Armstrong Theatre.
Friday, November 22 10 a.m.-5 p.m.: Seminar~ Techniques of Alcohol Management.
Kirkhof Center. 1 p.m.: Speech, by Dr. Michael Ryce. Portside Room, Kirkhof
Center.
Saturday, November 23 11 a.m.: Men's cross country. GVSC at NCAA Div. II
Nationals. East Stroudsburg, PA.
Sunday, November 24 10:30 a.m.: Dialogue worship. Kistler Pit. 2 p.m.: Concert. Youth Honors Band, William Root, director.
Louis Armstrong Theatre. Free. 6:30 p.m.: Catholic aass. 123 Manitou Hall.
Monday, November 25 8 p.m.: National Shakespeare Company performance of •The
Merchant of Venice.• Louis Armstrong Theatre. Tickets, $6 general admission. Reservations through the Theatre Office, ext. 3485.
page 3
Job Opening
EAP
Producer-Director, WGVC/WGVKTV. $i5,850-$25,3SO.
For more information, call Personnel, ext. 3215.