Posted on Apr 27, 2001

Events

Friday, April 27, through Monday, April 30, 8 and 10 p.m.
Reamer Auditorium
Film committee presents Finding Forrester.

Friday, April 27, 8 p.m.
Old Chapel
Student Activities and Performing Arts present a swing dancewith the Joey Thomas Big Band, one of the Capital Region'sleading ensembles. Tickets are $5. For more information, call ext. 6563.

Saturday, April 28, 1 p.m.
Central Park, Schenectady
Baseball vs. Hamilton (DH)

Saturday, April 28, 1 p.m.
Frank Bailey Field
Men's lacrosse vs. Hamilton

Saturday, April 28, 8 p.m.
Memorial Chapel
Union College-Schenectady Museum chamber seriespresents Claude Frank, piano, in a program to include Bach- Fantasie and Fugue, BWV 561; Schubert –Sonata, D.960; Mozart – Rondo, K. 511; Beethoven- Sonata No. 32, Op. 111. (Originally scheduled as a jointrecital with daughter, Pamela Frank, who has a hand injury.)

Sunday, April 29, 1 p.m.
Central Park, Schenectady
Baseball vs. Skidmore (one game, 9 innings)

Monday, April 30, 6:30 p.m.
Nott Memorial
Lecture by Daniel Mosquera, assistant professor ofSpanish: “Popular Devotion and the Politics of Religious Expressionin Latin America.” One of the events in “Saints, Sinners andSacred Spaces: Devotional Folk Art in Latin America”

Tuesday, May 1, at 7:30 p.m.
Everest Lounge, Hale House
Larzer Ziff, formerly the Washington Irving Professorof Literary and Historical Studies at Union, and the CarolineDonovan Professor Emeritus of Johns Hopkins University, on”Mark Twain and the Lands of Color.” For more information, callext. 6231.

Thursday, May 3, at 7:30 p.m.
Nott Memorial
Kenneth Miller, professor of biology at Brown University,and author of Finding Darwin's God: A Scientist's Search forCommon Ground Between God and Evolution, on “Accepting Godand Darwin: Resolving the Apparent Conflict Between Scienceand Religion.” Part of the Perspectives at the Nott lecture series.

Friday, May 4, through Monday, May 7, 8 and 10 p.m.
Reamer Auditorium
Film committee presents Family Man.