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Page Contents: Major change for Banana Slug Spring Fair Banff Mountain Film Festival benefits OPERS programs Italian consul-general visits campus and gives lecture on American cinema Sociologist Paul Lubeck will give talk on Muslim views on war and violence
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February 10, 2003 More News Major change for Banana Slug Spring Fair This year Banana Slug Spring Fair (BSSF) will focus only on alumni reunions and will not be an Admissions Office event. For a listing of BSSF alumni events, go to the Alumni Association events calendar. The decision to eliminate admissions yield activities from BSSF is due to escalating costs and the status of construction on the west side of campus, according to a memo issued by Kevin Browne, executive director of admissions and university registrar, and Carolyn Christopherson, executive director of the Alumni Association. With construction disruption, the Admissions Office will be able to give prospective student visitors a better sense of the campus in groups of 31 than would be possible with crowds of 9,000 to 10,000 visitors, typical with BSSF. Browne asks the campus community to be conscious of Admissions Tour groups and prospective student visitors as they make that difficult decision of where to enroll next fall, and to offer whatever assistance they are able. See
full text of message. Celebrating its fifth year of existence this year, UCSC's Gay, Lesbian,
Bisexual, and Transgender Resource Center has formed a "friends"
group of students, staff, faculty, alumni, and community members committed
to the enrichment of the center and its programs. Banff Mountain Film Festival benefits OPERS programs
Climb the highest peaks, paddle the wildest waters, and journey to some of the most enchanting and beautiful places on the planet from your seat at the Banff Mountain Film Festival. The festival will be held on Saturday and Sunday, February 22 and 23, at the Rio Theater on Soquel Avenue in Santa Cruz. It begins at 7:30 p.m. both evenings with a different group of films each evening. A listing of the films to be shown can be found on the UCSC Recreation Department web site. The Banff Mountain Film Festival, presented by Eagle Creek Travel Gear and National Geographic Magazine, is an international competition featuring the world's best films and videos on mountain and adventure subjects. Last year, 250 films from 27 countries were submitted to the competition. Local sponsors for the film festival are the UCSC Recreation Office, Bugaboo Mountain Sports, and Pacific Edge. Proceeds from the film festival benefit the UCSC Wilderness Orientation Scholarship Program and the UCSC Recreation Adventure Outings Scholarship Fund. Tickets are$9/general admission and $7/students and can be purchased
beginning January 27 at Bugaboo Mountain Sports (429-6300), Pacific Edge
Climbing Gym (454-9254), and the UCSC Box Office 459-2159 ($1 service
charge). Italian consul-general visits campus and gives lecture on American cinema Guido Fink, the Italian consul-general for California, traveled to UCSC
last week as a guest of the UCSC Jewish Studies Program. Fink delivered
a lecture on Jewish themes in American cinema at Cowell College and also
made an appearance in the class Literature of the Holocaust, taught
by Professors Murray Baumgarten and Peter Kenez. Fink is the author of the book, Not Only Woody Allen: The Jewish Tradition
in American Cinema, published in Italy in 2001, which received the
Italian award for the Best Critical Book on Film in 2002. He and his wife
Daniela were responsible for the Italian (subtitled) editions of Steven
Spielberg's Schindler's List, Louis Malle's Vanya on 42nd Street,
and Orson Welles's It's All True. Fink is currently on a four-year
leave from the University of Florence to serve as director of the Italian
Cultural Institute in Los Angeles. Sociologist Paul Lubeck will give talk on Muslim views on war and violence Paul Lubeck, professor of sociology and director of the Center for Global, International, and Regional Studies, will give a talk titled Islamic Responses to War and Violence on Tuesday, February 11, from noon to 1 p.m. in the Cowell College Conference Room. Students, staff, faculty, and community members are welcome; there is no charge. Lubeck teaches political economy, global issues, and the role of religion in social movements. He has lived and conducted research in Nigeria and Muslim West Africa for three decades. In addition to Nigeria, his field research experience includes Niger, Ghana, Malaysia, South Africa, and Mexico. Lubeck's first book, Islam and Urban Labor in Northern Nigeria, was awarded the Herskovits Prize in 1987. In the area of public service, he is a senior fellow at the Center for International Studies and director of the Global Information Internship Program at UCSC. Lubeck's talk is part of a lunchtime series on Religious Responses to
War and Violence, sponsored by the Lutheran Campus Ministry. For more
information, call (831) 247-6145. Currents provides regular updates on construction projects that have an impact on campus transportation and parking. Construction update story For more information, visit the Transportation
and Parking Services web site and the Physical
Planning and Construction web site. |
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