Eagle Connection - April 29-May 5, 2009
- Faculty funding: With endowment earnings down, faculty, emeriti, others funding scholarships
- UW-L Foundation awards 275 scholarships
- Alumni, students to be honored at Alumni Awards Ceremony and Reception
- Scholarships available to Wisconsin veterans attending UWs
- UW-L occupational therapy students job shadow in Scotland
- Career Services offers walk-in advice
- Quench thirst at Alex's Lemonade Stand fundraiser
- Graduating seniors exhibit artwork through May 8
- UW-L theatre season closes with striking drama
- UW-L Chamber Choir to perform May 1
- UW-La Crosse to host state music festival
- Baird and Trowbridge set farewell celebration
- Cash for gold Backyard Olympics on campus May 2
- UW-L at Twins' game May 3
- De-Stress Extravaganza set for May 4
- UW-L women, men ensembles featured in concert
- Majak retirement reception planned for May 5
- UW-L’s Festival of Three Choirs is May 5
- Academic Advising Corner
- Campus Kudos
- Murphy Library Notes
- Oral defense
- Classified ads
- Getting information into the Campus and Eagle Connections
Faculty funding
With endowment earnings down, faculty, emeriti and others are funding scholarships
UW-L Foundation awards 275 scholarshipsThe UW-L Foundation awarded 275 scholarships totaling more than $150,000 for 2009-10 at its annual Honor Reception April 27 in Valhalla, Cartwright Center-Gunning Addition. For a list of scholarship recipients, visit www.uwlax.edu/universityrelations/images/2009/spring/april/ScholarshipRecipients2009_10.pdf |
Faculty members in UW-L's microbiology department aren’t letting the sluggish economy ruin student scholarships. Nearly a dozen microbiology faculty and supporters have chipped in just over $3,000 above their regular donations to allow the department to award all of its seven scholarships for 2009-10.
Department Chair S. N. “Raj” Rajagopal says microbiology faculty unanimously felt that with the current economic climate it was even more important to support students. “It is an inopportune time to say no to scholarships because of the down-turn in endowment earnings,” explains Rajagopal. “We thought that it is a good way to recognize the students and at the same time show our commitment to the students and the program.”
Rajagopal says response from faculty was “enthusiastic and overwhelming.” Many were glad to band together to allow scholarship pay outs. “We feel the scholarships will have a positive impact on students, their opinion about our program and the commitment of faculty,” he says.
When the value of endowments waned nationwide, the UW-L Foundation asked many originators of funds to donate to allow payout of the scholarship despite there being little or no interest generated by an endowment. In many cases, long-time donors — and emeriti faculty — stepped forward.
“Without these generous gifts, we would be handing out a lot less awards,” says Scholarship Coordinator Sara Olson. “We’re very proud and thankful that many of these donors funded their typical scholarship pay outs despite the challenging economy.”
Microbiology faculty aren’t the only ones stepping up to make scholarships possible this year. Faculty in nuclear medicine technology, physical therapy, theater and the College of Liberal Studies Dean’s Office have also donated, allowing traditional pay outs for many scholarships in their programs.
Alumni, students to be honored at Alumni Awards Ceremony and Reception
Six UW-L alumni and six UW-L students will be honored at the 2009 Alumni Awards Ceremony and Reception, Friday, May 15, in the Cleary Alumni & Friends Center.
Abdi Samatar, '78; and Robert Synovitz, '53; will receive the Maurice O. Graff Distinguished Alumnus Award. The award recognizes alumni who have achieved honor, distinction, recognition and reputations that extend beyond their work and home environments.
Christopher Finn, '96; and Jennifer Shilling, '92; will receive the Rada Distinguished Alumnus Award. The award recognizes graduates within the last 20 years who have made exceptional contributions to their professions and communities.
Michael Downs, '83, will receive the Multicultural Alumni Award. The award recognizes multicultural alumni for their outstanding contributions to their profession and society.
Sandra Lee '84-'87, will receive the UW-La Crosse Honorary Degree. The UW-La Crosse Honorary Degree is bestowed to those who exemplify the university’s ideals through significant achievement and contributions.
Students being honored and their awards include:
- Melissa Sands and Rachel Kramer will receive the Murphy Awards for Academic Excellence.
- Mark Magruder will receive the Jake and Janet Hoeschler Award for Excellence.
- John Awowale will receive the Strzelczyk Award in Science and Allied Health.
- Natasha Musalem-Perez will receive the John E. Magerus Award for the Outstanding Graduating Senior from the College of Liberal Studies.
- Lynn Hrabik will receive the UW-La Crosse Graduate Thesis Award.
An hors d'oeuvres reception runs from 5:30-6:30 p.m. The awards ceremony begins at 6:30 p.m. in the Strzelczyk Great Hall. The cost is $25 per person. Call 785.8490 to make a reservation.
Find out more about the awards and nominate someone at www.uwlalumni.org/awards.php. For more on the six alumni being honored, see "In the Spotlight" on UW-L's home page.
Scholarships available to Wisconsin veterans attending UWs
Ten $1,000 scholarships are available to Wisconsin veterans attending UW System campuses during 2009-10.
The Donald P. Weber Veterans Memorial Scholarship is available to Wisconsin residents enrolled full time as an undergraduate or graduate student at a UW school. Recipients must be a veteran of the U.S. armed forces and in good academic standing. Potential recipients will also be required to give a short summary about themselves, their career plans and why they should receive the award. Financial need will be considered.
The scholarship was established through the UW-La Crosse Foundation in 2008 by Donald J. and Roxanne Weber, La Crosse, in honor or Donald’s father. Both were veterans, Donald P. serving in World War II and Donald J. in Vietnam.
“American Veterans have selflessly protected and defended us through the years,” said Donald J. when he established the scholarship. “Without them, we would not be able to enjoy the freedoms we have today.”
The deadline to submit applications is Friday, May 15, 2009. Get complete details through the UW-L Foundation at www.foundation.uwlax.edu/applications/WeberVeteransScholarship.pdf.
UW-L occupational therapy students job shadow in Scotland
![]() |
| Five UW-L OT graduate students job shadowed in Scotland during spring break. The students are pictured here in Edinburgh, Scotland. Students from left, Theresa Moes, Alaina Hackbart, Kim Pitzen, Hillary Larson and Claire Jones. |
Five UW-L graduate students studying occupational therapy traveled to Scotland over spring break to job shadow and immerse themselves in Scottish culture. Alaina Hackbarth, Claire Jones, Hillary Larson, Theresa Moes and Kim Pitzen job shadowed with occupational therapy practitioners in various settings, attended classes with students from the Robert Gordon University (RGU) in Aberdeen, Scotland, and participated in other cultural activities.
UW-L's master's of science in occupational therapy program offers an optional international perspectives course taught in collaboration with RGU. The students gained insights on different customs, values, beliefs and ways of life to further develop their cultural competence as future occupational therapists practitioners. Watch the Racquet for additional information about the students' experiences and discoveries.
The course is offered to occupational therapy graduate students spring semesters. For a complete course summary, see O-T 723 International Perspectives in Occupational Therapy at www.uwlax.edu/records/GradCat/CourseDescrips/O-T.htm.
For other international opportunities, see www.uwlax.edu/OIE/.
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
| Photos from left: Highlands in Scotland. Students from left, Theresa Moes, Claire Jones, Kim Pitzen, Hillary Larson and Alaina Hackbart. Ruthven Barracks and Loch Ness, Scotland. | ||
Career Services offers walk-in advice
Students with quick questions regarding summer or current internships and those graduating and still looking for a job, can find help. Special sessions run from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Wednesday, April 29, in Career Services in 54 Cartwright Center. No appointment needed.
Quench thirst at Alex's Lemonade Stand fundraiser
The women of Alpha Xi Delta are continuing their tradition of bringing Alex's Lemonade Stand to campus to help fight pediatric cancer.
Alpha Xi Delta will sell and serve lemonade from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, April 29-30, at Hoeschler Tower.
Alex was a young girl who started a lemonade stand to help raise money for her doctors to find a cure for her cancer. From 2000-04 she raised over $1 million. Alex died, but her idea still lives on throughout the country. All donations from the lemonade stand will go toward finding a cure for pediatric cancer.
For more information contact Becky Putzer at putzer.rebe@students.uwlax.edu or visit Alpha Xi Delta's Web site at www.uwlax.alphaxidelta.org.
![]() |
UW-L art students graduating in May will show their work in the annual Senior Exhibition through May 8 in the University Art Gallery. |
Graduating seniors exhibit artwork through May 8
Fifteen seniors graduating at UW-L this spring are exhibiting their artwork before they cross the stage to get their diploma.
The annual Senior Exhibition will feature paintings, sculpture, ceramics, photographs, metal work prints and video. The exhibition opened with a reception April 24 in the University Art Gallery. The exhibit runs through Friday, May 8. The reception and exhibit are free.
Graduating seniors exhibiting in the show include: Allison Bayer, Tessa Berg, Devon Browning, Beth Crook, Rebecca DeLapp, Melissa Fannin, Michelle Ikkala, Jennifer Licary, Caitlin Redding, Anna Rodriguez, Jillian Rowley, Lisa Trybom, Katie Vice, Bao Vue and Amy Waala.
Regular gallery hours are noon-8 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays, noon-5 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and during Toland Theatre events. The gallery also opens for appointments by calling the UW-L art department 785.8230.
If you go— |
If you go— |
UW-L theatre season closes with striking drama
The theatre arts department concludes its production season with Jules Tasca’s thought-provoking drama, “The Balkan Women.”
Performances run at 7:30 p.m. Thursday-Saturday, April 30-May 2, with a 2 o’clock matinee performance Sunday, May 3. The production will be staged in Toland Theatre in UW-L’s Center for the Arts.
Theatrically bold and politically charged, “The Balkan Women” is a meditation on the horror of war, updating the spirit of Euripides’ The Trojan Women to 1990. The play pits men against women, Christians against Muslims, and Croats against Serbs while not taking sides. Each character takes his or her turn as victim and villain, raising questions about who is most at fault.
Following the Thursday, April 30, performance the university’s department of women’s, gender and sexuality studies will hold a panel discussion about violence and sexual assault. Panel members include Tim Gruenke, La Crosse County District Attorney; Maureen Funk, social worker and coordinator of the Gundersen Lutheran Domestic Abuse/Sexual Assault Program; Justine Johnson, sexual assault victim advocate; and Ingrid Peterson, UW-L Violence Prevention Specialist.
Tickets are $4 for UW-L students, $10 for senior citizens and other students, and $12 for others. Tickets can be purchased at the box office in the lobby of the Center for the Arts or by calling 785.8522.
| If you go— Who: Chamber Choir What: Spring concert, “A Duet of Dances” When: 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 1 Where: Annett Recital Hall, Center for the Arts Admission: Free. |
UW-L Chamber Choir to perform May 1
The UW-L Chamber Choir will give its spring concert, “A Duet of Dances,” at 7:30 p.m. Friday, May 1, in Annett Recital Hall in the Center for the Arts. Admission is free.
Under the direction of Music Associate Professor Terence Kelly, the concert will feature two sets of strikingly different choral dances.
The first, “Liebeslieder Walzer Op. 52” by Johannes Brahms, is a set of love songs set in three-quarter time. Originally conceived as “house music,” the waltzes are arranged for choir and piano-four-hands. UW-L faculty pianist Mary Tollefson and student Megan Rebout will provide the accompaniment. The Liebeslieder were extremely popular in Brahms’ day and remain a favorite of choirs and audiences all over the world, notes Kelly.
The second work on the concert will Hugo Distler’s “Totentanz Op. 12, No. 2.” This “Dance of Death” is an adaptation of a medieval morality play that portrays Death as the great leveler of rank. In the play, Death calls to men and women of various ranks and professions to join his “dance.” Distler interspersed the dialogue with brief choral commentary pertinent to each character as they are called. The commentary is drawn from poetry of Angelus Silesius, a baroque, German mystic.
Distler was a brilliant young German composer, Kelly says, who grew up in the turgid days of World War I and the Weimar republic. The spiritual nature of his work was held suspect by the rising Nazi regime, and his music was eventually labeled “degenerate.” When faced with conscription into the Wehrmacht, he committed suicide rather than serve. “Dance of Death” is one of his most powerful and moving works, says Kelly.
| If you go— What: Wisconsin School Music Association State Music Festival Who: Wisconsin students in grades 6-12 When: 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, May 2 Where: UW-L Center for the Arts Admission: Free and open to the public. |
UW-L to host state music festival
Thousands of middle and high school students will head to campus Saturday, May 2, to perform in a Wisconsin School Music Association (WSMA) State Music Festival — one of the largest student events of its kind in the nation.
More than 32,000 student musicians will take part in WSMA State Music Festivals held on 11 university campuses throughout the state. UW-L hosts a WSMA State Music Festival from 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, May 2, in the Center for the Arts. The event is free and open to the public.
“This is certainly an exciting day for the performers, their parents and teachers,” says Music Assistant Professor Tammy Fisher, a WSMA state festival manager.
To participate in the WSMA State Music Festivals, students must first earn a “starred first” rating in Class A (the most difficult music) at a WSMA District Music Festival, hosted by schools for students in grades 6-12. Students can select from a variety of instrumental and vocal solo and ensemble categories for performances. Over 225 district festivals were held in Wisconsin during the past six months, involving more participants than any other student activity in the state.
“The dedication and effort that students demonstrate through WSMA State Music Festivals is truly inspiring. We are very proud to support their educational development,” said Robert Hanson, WSMA interim executive director.
Wisconsin universities hosting WSMA State Music Festivals April 25 include UW-Oshkosh, UW-Whitewater, UW-Platteville and UW-Milwaukee. St. Norbert College in DePere is scheduled to host the WSMA State Music Jazz Festival May 1. Festivals will be held May 2 at Cardinal Stritch University, UW-Eau Claire, UW-Green Bay, UW-L, UW-Parkside and UW-Stevens Point.
Learn more about WSMA State Music Festivals and other programs by visiting www.wsmamusic.org. WSMA State Music Festival information will be posted as available. Schedules and results will be searchable by school, student and event number.
Baird and Trowbridge set farewell celebration
Celebrate the good times and great memories of Baird and Trowbridge halls. A celebration is set for 11 a.m-3 p.m. Saturday, May 2, in the lobbies of Baird and Trowbridge halls. Tour the buildings, sign a memory book and chat with others about past times. Tours of the Office of Residence Life in its temporary Whitney Center location will also be provided. Coffee, other beverages and cake will be served.
Join current students in sharing all the great memories the halls have provided.
Cash for gold at Backyard Olympics on campus May 2
Registration deadline today
UW-L's Recreational Sports department teamed up with the REC 300 Program Planning in Recreation class to create Backyard Olympics, a unique recreation and fundraising event to raise money for UW-L's new academic building, Centennial Hall.
Teams of four compete against each other from 1-4 p.m. Saturday, May 2, at Drake field in a variety of traditional family backyard games including bean bag toss, ladder golf, bocci ball, croquet and badminton and some new games, such as disc golf and Kube.
Registration for the Backyard Olympics is $20 team. The team that raises the most money will be awarded points toward their total score for the event. Awards for participants include T-shirts and a cookout package. For more information and to register, download the registration form at www.uwlax.edu/recsports and return it to the Recreational Eagle Center by Wednesday, April 29.
UW-L at Twins' game May 3
Join Reuter Hall and other UW-L students at a Twins' games in the Metrodome on Sunday, May 3. The cost is $15 for the ticket and a $10 deposit for the bus ride. The $10 deposit will be returned when participants board the bus. Sign up at the Reuter Hall front desk. For more information, contact Emily Kane at kane.emil@students.uwlax.edu.
De-Stress Extravaganza set for May 4
Relax before finals at a De-Stress Extravaganza. The event runs from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday, May 4, in Port O’ Call, Cartwright Center-Gunning Addition. It includes massage and art therapy, lessons on meditation techniques, food and more. For more information, contact Matt Vogel at 785.8977.
If you go— |
UW-L women, men ensembles featured in concert
A spring concert will feature two choral ensembles from UW-L. Women’s Chorus and Männerchor will perform at 7:30 p.m. Monday, May 4, in Annett Recital Hall, Center for the Arts. Admission is free; seating is limited.
Women’s Chorus, directed by Paul Rusterholz, will begin the concert with John Wilbye’s madrigal, “As fair as morn,” in which an anxious, would-be lover awaits an answer. This will contrast with the Chinese folk song “Lan Hua Hua” (Blue Flower). African-style music is featured in Stephen Hatfield’s “Living in a Holy City.”
Cellist Derek Clark will be featured soloist in “Nada Te Turbe” by Joan Szymko, for cello and women’s voices. “Nada te turbe” is based on words of St. Teresa of Avila. Pianist Louise Temte and Clark will accompany the women in a movement from J. S. Bach’s Cantata 78, “Wir eilen mit schwachen, doch emsigen Schritten,” and in “Nigra Sum” by Spanish composer and cellist Pablo Casals. Broadway selections will include “Popular” from “Wicked” by Stephen Schwartz, and “Sun and Moon” from “Miss Saigon” by Claude-Michel Schönberg. The Women’s Chorus will conclude with Moses Hogan’s spiritual “My Soul’s Been Anchored in the Lord.”
The 26-member Männerchor, conducted by Gary Walth, will perform a variety of works for male chorus. Their repertoire will include an energetic setting of the gospel/spiritual “Swing Down Chariot” and the barbershop hit of the Everly Brother’s “Bye, Bye, Love.” Also featured, from Bernstein’s "West Side Story," is “Gee, Officer Krupke.” The men’s portion of the concert will conclude with Billy Joel’s “And so it Goes.” Männerchor is accompanied by Anna Erickson.
The choirs will combine to perform a choral setting of Bob Dylan’s “Ring Them Bells.”
Majak retirement reception planned for May 5
Plan to attend retirement reception for Jonathan Majak, Institute for Ethnic and Racial Studies, at 4 p.m. Tuesday, May 5, in the staff lounge on the fourth floor of Wimberly Hall.
Majak has worked at UW-L since 1980 and is past director of the Institute for Ethnic and Racial Studies. He has researched and written immigration policy issues. He is on the board of directors of the National Association for Ethnic Studies (NAES) is the book review editor for the association's journal, Ethnic Studies Review. In 2000, Majak received the Charles C. Irby Award for Distinguished Service from the NAES.
If you go— |
UW-L’s Festival of Three Choirs is May 5
The UW-L Concert Choir will host its fourth annual Festival of Three Choirs Tuesday, May 5. This year’s guest choral ensembles include the La Crosse Central’s Upper Women’s Chorus, under the direction of Kimberlee Shively, and the Aquinas High School Robed Choir, conducted by Peter Bosgraaf.
The concert begins at 7:30 p.m. in Annett Recital Hall, Center for the Arts. Admission is free; seating is limited.
The Concert Choir will perform a variety of works that will be featured in its upcoming tour to Ireland. After performances by the other high school ensembles, the concert will conclude with the three choirs singing Greg Gilpin’s arrangement of Bob Dylan’s “Ring Them Bells.”
The UW-L Concert Choir will travel to Ireland May 18 to begin a 10-day performance tour. The choir will give concert programs with a wide repertoire of choral music from the United States and Europe. Their concerts will also feature choral works by Irish composers or influenced by Irish folk music. Included in that group will be Charles Villier Stanford’s “The Bluebird,” “Michael McGlynn’s “Dulaman” and conductor Gary Walth’s settings of Psalm 67 and “A Gaelic Blessing.”
Along with a performance in La Crosse’s sister city of Bantry, the choir will be singing in the Irish cities of Kinsale and Charleville, along with Kylemore Abbey. The tour will conclude with a concert in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin.
![]() |
By Academic Specialist Charlene Holler, Counseling and Testing Center
Word has it!
The answers to last week’s palindromes are radar, deed, Abba and tenet.
The last installments of word play this semester are puns. Find a meaning for each of the given words that rhyme. Two examples are:
- “slender adolescent” ... “lean teen”
- “sanitary lima” ... “clean bean”
- odd ale ...
- ancient ore ...
- ignorant finger ...
- unkind gem ...
- a modest 007 ...
![]() |
![]() |
In 2007, Sergeant-at-Arms Gordon Faust held an umbrella as Music Professor Soojin Kim Ritterling played a Korean Buk drum at a Korean War Veterans Memorial Ceremony at Plover. Ritterling is a recipient of a Fulbright Scholar grant to study musical instruments in Korea. Photo by Don Koch. |
Ritterling, Xiong receive Fulbright Scholar grants
Music Professor Soojin Kim Ritterling and graduate student Mai Choua Xiong have been awarded Fulbright Scholar grants to conduct research 2009-10.
While on a sabbatical leave from UW-L, Ritterling will visit Korea to research Korean traditional percussion music performances in contemporary Korean society at the Dulsori Arts and Culture and the National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts Center in South Korea. Ritterling is one of approximately 1,100 U.S. faculty and professionals who will travel abroad through the Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program.
Xiong, a second-year student affairs administration student, will pursue her Fulbright experience in Hong Kong as a representative of the U.S.
Recipients of Fulbright awards are selected on the basis of academic or professional achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership potential in their fields.
Fulbright recipients are among over 40,000 individuals participating in U.S. Department of State exchange programs each year. For more than 60 years, the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs has supported programs that seek to promote mutual understanding and respect between the people of the U.S. and other countries. The Fulbright U.S. Scholar Program is administered by the Council for International Exchange of Scholars.
For more information about the Fulbright Program, visit http://fulbright.state.gov.
Fitschen presentation makes top three
UW-L graduate student Peter Fitschen's research presentation was selected as one of the American Society for Nutrition's top three graduate student presentations at the Experimental Biology Meetings in New Orleans. Over 10,000 national and international biological scientists attended the conference.
Gander is Wisconsin Outstanding Educator of the Year
UW-L Early Childhood Education Professor Barb Gander was selected this year's Wisconsin Outstanding Educator (WEA) of the Year at the Student Wisconsin Education Association Awards Banquet in Racine. UW-L's Student WEA Chapter led by President Sara Bradley won the award for Local Chapter Excellence, in recognition of outstanding special events, political and citizen action and networking with the community.
Officers for 2009-10 elected
Student Senate and Residence Hall Association Council (RHAC) election results are in. Officers for the 2009-10 school year, include: Erik Kahl, Student Association president; Karly Wallace, vice-president; and Laura Stolp, RHAC president.
RecycleMania results now available
UW-L finished 118 among 510 schools in recycling and waste prevention in RecycleMania 2009, a national college contest spurring recycling efforts held Jan. 18 through March 28. As a first-year participant, UW-L recovered approximately 85,960 pounds of recyclables. To find out more, visit www.uwlax.edu/universityrelations/images/2009/spring/april/recyclemania.pdf
![]() |
Putz receives 2009 Murphy Award
James Putz is this year’s Eugene W. Murphy Library Special Recognition Award recipient. Putz receives the award at 7 p.m. Tuesday, May 5, in Special Collections, 156 Murphy Library Resource Center.
Putz, communication studies, is the course director of CST110, a course that reaches more than 2,000 students annually. Not only is Putz a tireless advocate for the importance of using library resources and citing them properly in his own classroom, in his role as CST 110 Director, he requires all CST110 instructors to include an information literacy instruction component. Because CST110 is a required course, this is the most effective vehicle the library has currently for teaching information literacy skills in a systematic way.
Putz further made an important contribution to information literacy instruction in 2005 and 2006 when he co-chaired an interdisciplinary lesson study group consisting of CST110 instructors and Murphy Library librarians focused on studying and revising the CST110 information literacy lesson. The work of the committee resulted in effective revisions to the lesson, better communication between CST110 course instructors and librarians, and in publication of an article about the study in the March 2007 issue of the peer reviewed online journal, Teaching Forum: A Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. Librarians also presented the results of the study at the 2007 Wisconsin Association of Academic Librarians conference. More recently in fall 2008, Putz volunteered his freshmen students in three sections of CST 110 to take the ISkills test. The data gleaned from the test results will enable the library to learn more about the information literacy skills of our freshmen so that we can be better prepared to meet the needs of our new students.
The Murphy Library Award was established in 1986 by Murphy Library and the UW-L Foundation to recognize notable contributions to the library’s mission, program, and purposes.
![]() |
Benjamin Burns, Ed.S. school psychology degree candidate, "Professional Burnout in School Psychology: Impact of Changing Practices," 1:30-3:30 p.m., Friday, May 1, 305 Graff Main Hall. Adviser: Robert Dixon.
![]() |
Give away
The University Honors Program is giving away a microwave oven and cart. The microwave is an older model but works well. If interested, stop by the Honors Office, 336 Wimberly Hall, or call Deb Hoskins at 785.8734.
For sale
Reclining love seat in good condition, $75 OBO. E-mail smith.kara@students.uwlax.edu.
Nissan Versa 07 Sedan, 13, 500 miles; six-speed manual; air conditioning; air bags; power steering, windows and door locks; cruise control; six multi CD player. Excellent condition. $12,000/OBO. Call 608.797.4669.










