Volume Six, Number Forty-Seven MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC the IUPUI

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Volume Six, Number Forty-Seven MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC the IUPUI volume six, number forty-seven MUSIC, MUSIC, MUSIC The IUPUI campus will be echoing with the sounds of music as instrumentalists, gancers and collegiate choruses take their places for a series of holiday programs. The New York Street Singers of IUPUI will present their annual Holiday Concert next Sunday (December 5) at 8 p.m. in the Union Building. Free and open to the public, the program will include songs from the Broadway musical "The Wiz" (a "soul" version of "The Wizard of Oz"), Hoagy Carmichael's "Rockin' Chair" and "Day by Day" from "Godspell." Christmas favorites will include Mel Torme's "Christmas Song," "Turkey Lurkey," "Sleigh Ride" and "Do you Hear What I Hear?". Featured soloists will be Kristi Tridle, George Simpson, Mary Dunham and Urban Wagner. The group's dance corps will present "Flash, Bang, Wallop!" and "Walk Him Up the Stairs." Choreographers are Susan and John Michos. Accompanists for the concert, which is under the direction of Charles Manning, will be the Allen Steinberger Trio. On Monday (December 6) the Indianapolis Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Wolfgang Vacano, opera conductor and professor of music at IUB, will offer a free concert at 8 p.m. in the Union Building cafeteria. Selections will include some Christmas pieces, four6 Scottish dances and some popular melodies. The program, presented by the IUPUI Lectures and Convocations Committee, is made possible by a grant from the Indiana Arts Commission. The musical finale will be the trio of Madrigal Dinners December 10-12 at 7:30 p.m. in the Union Building. Tickets for this popular traditional evening of medieval music and menu are available at the Union Building Director's Office. Prices are $6.75 for adults and $5.25 for students and children. * * * BOOKS FOR A BARGAIN The Indianapolis Campus Bookstores, in co-operation with several leading publisher~ throughout the. country, are holding a gigantic book sale this week (November 29- December 3) -- just in time to choose gift books, boxed Christmas cards and stationery, gift wrap and stocking stuffers. Hundr eds of titles - - ranging through art, animals, Americana, children's books, f i ction, former best sellers and special imports - - will be on hand at prices ranging from $1 to $29.98 for books regularly priced from $3.95 to $50. - 2 - The sale will be set up in the student lounge on the lobby floor of the Union Building. Hours are 11 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Monday, 8:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, and 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. on Friday. * * * WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE & SOMETIMES WHY Exhibits -- Pharmacy displays this week in University Hospital will be Pfizer Laboratories on Wednesday and C.V. Mosby (publishers) on Friday. Burroughs­ Wellcome Co. will have a display in Riley Hospital qn Friday. Hours are 8:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. d Seminar-- "An Express Ro to the Localization of Amylase," Biochemistry Faculty Seminar by Dr. Marion E. ' od s, professor of medical genetics and medicine; Medical Science Building, Rfom 326, 4 p.m. Monday (coffee at 3:45p.m.). Party -- LaVonne~t Jut will be honored for her 15 years of service to the Pediatric Cardiology Department with an open house-retirement party Tuesday from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Conference Room (Room 126) of the Riley Research Wing. Friends and colleagues are:;lvited. Tuesday -- "M c ' nisms of Mesenchymal Interactions," Medical Genetics Seminar by Dr. Harold C. vkin, professor of biochemistry at the University of Southern California School of Dentistry; Riley Research Wing, Room 139, 4 p.m. Continue-- "Treatment and Management of Chronic Obstructive Lung Disj ase," School of Medicine Continuing Education Course directed by Dr. Richld E. 1 Brd~hear, professor of medicine. Guest speakers will be Dr. Luther L. erry, former surgeon ~ general of the U.S. Public Health Service, and Dr. Benjamin urrows, director of the Division of Respiratory Sciences at the Arizona Medical enter in Tucson, Airport Holiday Inn, all day Wednesday and Thursday. ~ ~~~~~~--Assistant professors bf medicine Dr. Arthur E.VW~n and Dr. Kevin J. discuss "Atrial Myxoma" and "Ethylene Glycol Poisoning," respectively, rounds Wednesday at 8:15 a.m. in Myers Auditorium of Wishard Memorial TV Special -- "Therapeutic Approach to Neck Mass" is this month's presentatfo on WAT 21's Grand Rounds in Surgery Series. The program will feature Dr. John Mayer, assistant professor of sur$~t'y and assistant director of the Section of Plastic Surgery, and Dr. Sterling Tignor, clinical associate professor of surgery on the plastic surgery service The program, which can be seen in regular WAT 21 viewing areas, starts at noon We nesday'. Course-- "Clinical Syndromes of Auto-Immunity," School of Medicine Continuing Education Course, directed by Dr. Paul S. Rhoads, will be held all day Thursday at Reid Memorial Hospital at Richmond. Freebie-- "Uptown Saturday Night" is this week's free movie_which will be shown Thursday at noon in the Krannert Building at 38th Street and on Friday at 8:15 p.m. in the Lecture Hall. - 3 - ISO -- Metropolitan Opera husband-and-wife duo, Sandra Warfield, mezzo-soprano, and James McCracken, tenor, will appear in debut performances with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in concerts Friday and Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in Clowes Memorial Hall. Other Side of the World Dept. -- "Crucial Issues in Southern Africa," a lecture and discussion by Dr. Robert Nelson, will be held next Sunday (December 5) at 3 p.m. at the International Center, 1050 West 42nd Street. Dr. Nelson, executive secretary of the Africa Department of the Division of Overseas Ministries of the Christian Church, will talk about the complex problems in Rhodesia (Zimbabwe), Namibia (Southwest Africa) and South Africa. * * * NEWS 'N' NOTES FROM HERE 'N' THERE Renovate -- The Medical Bookstore in the Union Building is getting a face lift. Improvements including tearing down walls to make more space and installing new fixtures are under way with next spring being the anticipated completion time. "Orientate"-- Word from the -Personnel Division is that there will be no new employee orientation session Monday (November 29) or December 13. Designate -- Col. Spurgeon Davenport, head of the Safety Department, reminds readers of the escort service provided for unescorted females between 5 p.m. and 1 a.m. from any building on campus to their cars. Just dial "O" for operator and request the escort bus. Communicat -- The Sigma Xi Society Chapters of the I.U. School of Medicine and Butler Uni ~sity announce a special lecture on "Nutritional Control of Aging and Cancer" which will be held Wednesda December 8 at 7:30 p.m. in the Lilly Auditori~ ifth floor) of Wishard Memorial Hospital. The guest speaker will be Dr. c. A. La g, a Sigma Xi national lecturer from the Louisville School of Medicine. The lecture i open to all interested persons. Sigma Xi members and their guests are welcome to meet with Dr. Lang informally for dinner at the University Hospital cafeteria at 5:30 p.m. * * * HONORS & ACCOLADES Dr. Kathleen AFitzhugh-Bell, associate professor of neurology (psychology) and director of the neurops chology section, has been elected to the board of trustees of the National Easter al Research Foundat 6n. She also is serving as president of the Indiana Psycho o al Association, a~ng with Department of Psychology representatives Scott ve ec and Robert F6rtier. Evenbeck is secretary and editor of the Indiana Psycholog t and Fortier is a member of the association's executive committee. Dr. Robert Bring e, IUPUI Department of Psychology, heads a new division of the organization, which is attempting to involve academic psychologists more fully in the group's activities. - 4 - ARCHIVES ROOM 316 UNI VERSITY LIBRARY 420 BLAKE ST Neil tthew, associate professor of fine arts, has had three works accepted into the h storic Wabash Valley Bicentennial Photo Competition. The show is open to the publi hrough Friday at the Lafayette (Ind.) Art Center. A paper by Rhonda o le, senior in the School of Medicine, won the Young Investigator Award for the most outstanding paper submitted and presented by a house officer or medical student at the recent annual meeting of the Midwest Society for Pediatric Research in Chicago. Her co-authors were Dr. Roger A. Hurwitz and D • Donald A. Girod of the Department of Pediatrics. The paper dealt with "L fe Expectancy for Patients with Atrioventricular Canal: Down's vs Non-Down's." J ~~~-=~~~~d~le~e~, professor of parasitic diseases, recently received the Distinguished ember Award, a plaque in recognition of his service to the Indiana Conference of the American Association of University Professors. The presentatio came at the group's annual meeting at Hanover College. Dr. A. Alan 'F\scher., professor and chairman of family m~dicine, is among 25 persons chosen from across' the nation for membership in the Instit ute of Medicine. Member- ship in the Institute is based on major contributions to health and medicine or to such relate fields as the social and behavioral sciences, law, administration or engineering. James F. Bailey III, associate profes sor of law and director of the I.U. School of Law Library, Indianapolis, was elected president of the Ohio Regional Associa­ tion of Law Libraries at the fall meeting of the organization in Niagara Falls, New York. The group includes law librarians from Ohio, Michigan, Indiana , Illinois, Kentucky, western Pennsylvania, southern Ontario and western West Virginia. This is the first time that a law librarian from Indiana has been so honored. * * * GREEN SHEET'S FRIENDLY AD SERVICE Ride needed - - From 2113 Kenyon Street to Purchasing Department, 630 West New York Street, 8 a.m.
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