Friday, Feb. 13, through Monday, Feb. 16, 8 and 10 p.m., Reamer
Campus Center Auditorium. Film, I Know What You Did Last Summer, presented by
film committee.
Friday, Feb. 13, 8 p.m., Performing Arts Studio. Prof. Tim Olsen,
piano and trumpet, joins Loren Schoenberg, saxophone, in a performance of new and classic
jazz works. Schoenberg, a Grammy-winner and curator of the Benny Goodman Archives at Yale
University, will give a lecture on Feb. 13, at 1:30 p.m. in Arts 215.
Through Feb. 16, Arts Building, second floor. Selections from
Fall 1997 photography students.
Tuesday, Feb. 17, 7 p.m., Reamer Campus Center Auditorium. Prof.
Adrian MacFarlane of Hartwick College on “Digging Deeper to Soar Higher,” part
of the celebration of African Heritage Month.
Wednesday, Feb. 18, 7 p.m., Reamer Campus Center Auditorium. “Black
Jeopardy” tests contestants on their knowledge of black history, also part of African
Heritage Month events.
Thursday, Feb. 19, 4:30 p.m., Reamer Campus Center Auditorium. Richard
D. Wilk, associate professor of mechanical engineering, faculty colloquium titled
“Understanding the Chemical and Physical Aspects of Combustion: Implications for
Energy and the Environment.”
Thursday, Feb. 19, 7:30 p.m., Nott Memorial. Prof. Peter
Tobiessen, biology, on “Global Warming — What Me Worry? The Effect on Plants and
Animals.” The talk is the third in the four-part lecture series on Global Climate
Change by Union's Environmental Studies.
Through March 6, Mandeville Gallery, Nott Memorial. Abstract
drawings and sculptures by Prof. Chris Duncan.
Thursday, Feb. 26, 11:30 a.m., Memorial Chapel. Founders Day
convocation featuring Robert Coles, the renowned child psychiatrist and author, speaking
on “Moral Energy of the Young.” The convocation also will feature the
presentation of the Gideon Hawley Prizes to high school teachers of Union students.