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Griz Greetings!
Welcome to TGIF News. This e-mail newsletter
is provided weekly, except during the summer
and scheduled academic breaks, to subscribers
that include students, alumni, employees and
friends of The University of Montana.
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Native American Center To Break Ground
Leaders from all Montana American Indian
tribes will be at UM on Saturday, April 19,
to speak at the groundbreaking ceremony for
the Native American Center.
The public is invited to attend the ceremony,
which begins at 9 a.m. at the building site,
located on the UM Oval south of the Grizzly
Bear statue and east of Lommasson Center.
The first of its kind on a U.S. university
campus, the center will house UM's Native
American studies department and American
Indian Student Services offices, as well as
related campus programming, under one roof.
Construction will begin this summer, with
completion expected in fall 2009. The center
will be the first UM campus building
constructed in accordance with the Leadership
in Energy Efficient Design's green building
standards.
For more information, contact Linda Juneau,
UM tribal liaison at 406-243-6093 or
linda.juneau@mso.umt.edu.
Native American Center News
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Lecture Examines Climate Change, Disease Link
Rita Colwell, one of the world's foremost
scientific experts on emerging infectious
diseases, will give the next installment of
the President's Lecture Series at UM on
Monday, April 14.
Her presentation, "Oceans, Climate and Human
Health: The Cholera Paradigm," begins at 8
p.m. in the University Theatre.
An authority on marine science, Colwell will
talk about research on emerging diseases in
the waters of both the developed and
developing world.
Earlier that day from 3:10 to 4:30 p.m., she
will give a seminar titled "Infectious
Diseases, Climate and the Environment" in
Gallagher Business Building Room 123.
Both events are free and open to the public
and presented in collaboration with the
Montana-Ecology of Infectious Diseases
education and research program.
President's Lecture Series
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Author To Share Tales Of Tibetan River Trip
Author Craig Childs, UM's Kittredge
Distinguished Visiting Writer in
Environmental Studies, will host a reading
and slide show about his September 2007 first
descent of a river in Tibet at 7:30 p.m.
Monday, April 7, in Turner Hall's Dell Brown
Room.
At the presentation, titled "Lost in Tibet,"
Childs will share astonishing stories and
images of running 200 miles of uncharted
water through 17,000-foot mountains.
Childs is the author of "The Animal
Dialogues," "The Secret Knowledge of Water,"
"House of Rain," "Soul of Nowhere" and
numerous other books. His recent essays have
appeared in Orion, High Country News and The
Sun, and he is a regular commentator on NPR's
"Morning Edition."
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