Feature Image
UM's marching band in front of Main Hall at
Homecoming 2004. (Photo by Denny Lester)
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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, as a service to
students, alumni, employees and friends of The
University of Montana.
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Alums, Community Invited To Homecoming Activities
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A giant pep rally with the Montana Grizzlies and the
state’s largest parade are just two of the events for
community members and returning alumni to enjoy
during UM Homecoming Friday and Saturday, Sept.
30-Oct. 1. This year’s theme is “Treasure the Past,
Embrace the Future.”
Homecoming festivities for the local community kick
off Sunday, Sept. 25, at Southgate Mall’s Clock
Court with a celebration from 1 to 3 p.m. The event
features appearances by Monte and the UM cheer
squad and dance team, as well as a chance to
win “the ultimate tailgate party.”
The annual Homecoming Art Fair runs from 10 a.m. to
6 p.m. Thursday through Saturday in the University
Center Atrium.
Friday and Saturday are the big days for events,
some of which center around Saturday's Homecoming
game pitting the Montana Grizzlies against the Weber
State Wildcats. Friday evening, the public is invited
to cheer on head coach Bobby Hauck and the
football team on the eve of the big match.
The Grizzly Growl Pep Rally will be included in the 8
p.m. Singing on the Steps of Main Hall ceremony,
which also will feature crowning of the Royal
Ambassadors, the marching band and the traditional
lighting of the M.
Saturday’s Homecoming Parade begins at 10 a.m. at
Circle Square in downtown Missoula and travels south
down Higgins Avenue.
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Homecoming Event Honors Distinguished Alumni
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The UM Alumni Association’s highest honor will go to
three graduates during next weekend’s Homecoming
celebration.
This year’s Distinguished Alumni Award recipients are
Bruce D. Crippen of Billings; James Grady of Silver
Spring, Md.; and Deborah Doyle McWhinney of
Tiburon, Calif.
The Distinguished Alumni Awards Ceremony begins at
6 p.m. Friday, Sept. 30, in the University Center
Ballroom. A reception will follow. The public is invited
to both events.
Crippen, a Billings attorney, earned a bachelor’s
degree in accounting in 1956 and a juris doctorate in
1959. Grady, an author and screenplay writer,
received a bachelor’s degree in journalism in 1972.
McWhinney, president of Schwab Institutional,
earned a bachelor’s degree in communication studies
in 1977.
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UM Observes American Indian Heritage Day
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UM is celebrating American Indian Heritage Day with
a full slate of events today and in the coming week.
UM President George Dennison started American
Indian Heritage Day several years ago as a way for
campus to honor Native cultures and traditions. The
day is celebrated the fourth Friday in September
each year.
Today’s events include a sunrise ceremony at the M
Trail, a Salish elders panel, President Dennison’s
proclamation about the special day, a lecture by Earl
Old Person on treaty-making, and a reception for
Blackfeet artist Francis Wall.
See the news release for a complete schedule of
events.
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UM Launches Conflict Resolution Program
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A new graduate-level certificate program, Natural
Resources Conflict Resolution, is being co-sponsored
by UM’s School of Law, School of Business
Administration, College of Forestry and Conservation,
College of Arts and Sciences, and Graduate School.
The program, which offers students a working
knowledge of the theory and practice of
collaboration, consensus building and conflict
resolution as they apply to natural resources and the
environment, is the first of its kind in the nation.
A fall graduate seminar, Advanced Natural Resources
Conflict Resolution, continues Friday, Sept. 30, with
a free, public lecture by Lawrence Susskind on the
history, status, future and dynamics of negotiating
international environmental treaties.
Susskind is the Ford Professor of Urban and Regional
Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology and founder of the MIT-Harvard Public
Disputes Program. He will speak from 3 to 5 p.m. in
the Law Building’s Castles Center.
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Conference Tackles Topics of Water Rights
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"Water and the Landscape of the American West" is
the focus of the 29th annual Public Land Law
Conference to be held at UM Wednesday through
Friday, Oct. 5-7.
The conference, sponsored by the Public Land and
Resources Law Review, is free and open to the
public. Attorneys are eligible to receive up to 12
Continuing Legal Education credits for attending the
conference.
For more information, call (406) 243-6558 or e-mail
plrlr@umontana.edu.
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Efforts Raise Nearly $6,000 For Hurricane Victims
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During the past two weeks, just under $6,000 has
been collected in the University Center for Hurricane
Katrina survivors.
The money, which went to the American Red Cross,
was donated by campus denizens via Culligan water
jugs placed throughout the UC and a table with
volunteers selling ribbons striped in Mardi Gras colors.
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CosmoGIRL! Magazine Ranks UM Among 50 Best
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For the second consecutive year, CosmoGIRL!
magazine has selected UM for its list of “50 Best
Colleges” for girls. The list appears in the October
issue of CosmoGIRL! available on newsstands now.
Of the 50, only 16 were public institutions. Lewis and
Clark College in Portland, Ore., was the only other
school in the Pacific Northwest to make the list.
The magazine notes that UM has one of the largest
percentages of alumni who volunteer for the Peace
Corps. It also spotlights “UM’s intriguing course” --
the Wilderness and Civilization Studies Program,
saying “Dig the outdoors? You’ll love this class,
where students go on a 10-day backpacking and
canoeing trip along the Missouri River!”
The magazine looked for schools with small class
sizes, prominent female faculty, strong women’s
sports teams, career centers that excel at internship
and job placement, and leadership opportunities in
campus clubs and activities.
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Archaeologist’s Book Reveals A Complex Wild West
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Everyone knows the Hollywood stereotype of Old
West saloons: poker cheats, massive brawls,
cowboys punched through windows and drunken
gunfights.
But a new book by UM archaeologist Kelly Dixon
shoots some holes in this mythic tapestry, revealing
a historic West that’s more inclusive and complex.
“Boomtown Saloons: Archaeology and History in
Virginia City” is based on Dixon’s doctoral dissertation
work in the historic mining town near Reno, Nev. She
helped excavate several saloons that represent a
wide spectrum of wealth, class and race.
Dixon said she tried to write a book that will appeal
to a layperson as much as archaeology scholars.
“When you integrate the historical and archaeological
resources from these places, the story becomes so
much more dramatic,” she said. “It’s beyond what we
could have imagined.”
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Blackfeet Artist Displays Abstract Paintings At UM
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An exhibit of recent abstract paintings by Blackfeet
artist Francis Wall will be on display through Friday,
Nov. 25, at UM.
The exhibit is located in the lobby of UM’s Davidson
Honors College. An artist reception will be held from 3
to 4 p.m. today, Sept. 23, in conjunction with
American Indian Heritage Day.
Wall, who was raised and educated on the Blackfeet
Indian Reservation in Browning, incorporates
American Indian subjects and Northern Plains Indian
geometric designs into his paintings.
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‘Bat Boy: The Musical’ Takes Flight At UM
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The Department of Drama/Dance will present “Bat
Boy: The Musical” at 7:30 p.m. October 4-8 and 11-
15 in the Montana Theatre of the Performing Arts
and Radio/Television Center.
Eager to be accepted by a world that isn’t quite
ready for him, Bat Boy learns the ways of civilization
and especially how fear of the unknown can bring out
the worst in human beings. This musical tragicomedy
blends campy humor, horror and music both beautiful
and hysterical. Audience discretion is advised
because of adult subject matter.
To reserve seats, call the drama/dance box office at
(406) 243-4581. The box office is open Monday
through Friday from 11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
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Project Addresses Needs of State's Nonprofits
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A 2005-06 American Humanics Cohen Grant awarded
to UM will help to enhance professional development
opportunities for employees of the state's nonprofits.
UM earned the award for its project "Statewide
Curriculum Coordination for Nonprofit Management
Preparation."
The yearlong project has two phases and could be
implemented as early as fall 2006, said Andrea
Vernon, director of UM's Office for Civic Engagement.
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Grizzlies Slow Down Jackrabbits
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The UM football team's defense held the South
Dakota State University Jackrabbits to just over 100
total yards en route to 7-0 nonconference victory
on a rain-soaked day in Montana's
Washington-Grizzly Stadium.
The only score of the game came on Montana's third
possession of the contest, as junior running back Lex
Hilliard scored on a three-yard run. Hilliard was a
workhorse and tied his career-high with 25 carries,
picking up 128 hard-earned yards. It was his
seventh career 100-yard rushing game and his
second this season.
The Grizzlies have no game this weekend and return
to action Saturday, Oct.1, for UM’s Homecoming
weekend in Missoula.
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Volleyball Ends With Solid Pre-Conference Play
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Montana defeated Portland in three games on
Saturday evening in its final match of the Denver
University Invitational. With the victory, the Grizzlies
finished 2-1 at the tournament and improved to 10-4
overall. Earlier in the tournament, UM beat Northern
Illinois 3-0 and lost to host Denver University 0-3.
UM opens Big Sky Conference play this week, when
the Grizzlies travel to Northern Arizona and
Sacramento State. Montana, which had its best
pre-conference performance since the 1999 season,
faced the Lumberjacks Thursday night and next take
on the Hornets at 8 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 24.
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Montana Soccer Wins One On The Road
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Junior Lindsay Winans netted a pair of goals to lead
the UM soccer team to a 2-0 win over Idaho Sunday
afternoon at Guy Wicks Field in Moscow.
The win was the Grizzlies' first road conquest of 2005
and improved their season record to 2-5-1. UM lost
3-1 to Gonzaga Friday night at Martin Field in
Spokane, Wash.
Montana is off this weekend, returning to action the
next week on the road at Eastern Washington and
Washington State. They’ll meet the Eagles in the Big
Sky Conference-opener at 5 p.m. Friday, Sept. 30,
and battle the Cougars at 2 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 2.
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