Feature Image
A class enjoys a perfect autumn day on the Oval.
(Photo by Todd Goodrich)
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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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Montana Copper Magnate, Senator Subject Of Lecture
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The second installment of the President’s Lecture
Series at UM delves into the colorful life and history
of copper king and Montana U.S. Senator William
Andrews Clark (1839-1925).
Ambassador Andre Baeyens will present “From Copper
to Corots: The Two Lives of William Andrews Clark,
Senator of Montana” at 8 p.m. Monday, Oct. 10, in
the University Theatre.
Earlier that day, Baeyens will present a
seminar, “Franco-American Relations: Past and
Present,” from 3:10 to 4:30 p.m. in Gallagher
Business Building Room 123.
Both events, held in collaboration with the O’Connor
Center for the Rocky Mountain West, are free and
open to the public.
Clark was elected senator of the state of Montana at
the beginning of the 20th century. His successful
pursuit of wealth, especially in copper mines at Butte
and in Jerome, Ariz., was not out of the ordinary in
those freewheeling days, Baeyens said. But Clark was
unique in his devotion to the finer things in life: his
great art collection, his monumental house in
Manhattan, N.Y., and his abiding love of France and
its culture.
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Journalism Lecture To Discuss Blogging, Media
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Christine Boese, a writer for CNN Headline News and
a blogging pioneer, will present a free, public lecture
at 7 p.m. Monday, Oct. 10, in the University Center
Theater.
Her lecture is titled “Big Media and Little Bloggers:
How Corporate Media Responded to War-Blogging
Journalists.” Blogging, for those unfamiliar with the
term, is a series of Web postings that can range from
hard-hitting news articles to personal diaries,
commentary and photography.
Boese is the fifth Distinguished Pollner Professor at
UM’s journalism school. A Wisconsin native, she has
worked as a newspaper reporter and has taught at
universities in Wisconsin, Arkansas, Georgia, New
York and South Carolina.
She also keeps more than two dozen blogs -- public
and private -- including prominent “warblogs” from
the Iraq War for two international freelance
journalists who covered the war from Kurdistan in
2003.
This semester Boese is teaching a blogging seminar
and working with the student staff of the Kaimin,
UM’s campus newspaper.
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Lecture Addresses Violence Against Women
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“Barred and Gagged: Women, Prison and
Representation” will be presented at UM from 7 to 9
p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 19, in Social Science Building
Room 352.
The lecture is free and open to the public.
Carol Jacobsen, visiting scholar from the University of
Michigan, will present the lecture using documentary
film and art as media through which to address
censorship and violence against women.
The event offers a unique opportunity to learn about
systems of gender inequality and oppression that
exist within the criminal justice system and the
possibilities for justice-oriented action through
scholarship, art and activism.
Jacobsen, an associate professor of art, also chairs
the Justice Committee of the Washtenaw County
American Civil Liberties Union and coordinates the
Michigan Battered Women’s Clemency Project. She
exhibits her work throughout the United States and
abroad and has lectured widely on the human rights
issues of silencing and the censorship of marginalized
women.
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UM Hosts Preview Of Campus Life
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High school students and their parents can get a
glimpse of life and learning at UM during its annual
open house to be held from 8:15 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Saturday, Nov. 5.
The event, UM Days, aims to help high school juniors
and seniors with their college search. Participants
can learn about the University’s academic programs,
student life and extracurricular activities, as well as
get information about financial aid and career
choices.
UM Days also offers the opportunity for participants
to meet in small group settings with currently
enrolled students to tour the University campus and
residence halls.
Interested students and parents can register for UM
Days online or by calling (800) 462-8636. For more
information and a brochure, e-mail Molly Molloy, UM
director of orientation, at
mmolloy@mso.umt.edu.
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Fulbright Awards Support Students’ International Study
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Three recent UM graduates have received Fulbright
grants to continue their study and research projects
in countries outside the United States this year.
The three students – Ulrike Anderson of Stillwater,
Minn., Russell Fielding of Temple Terrace, Fla., and
Valerie Kurth of Wausau, Wis. – were selected for
the awards on the basis of academic or professional
achievement, as well as demonstrated leadership
potential in their fields.
Anderson received a bachelor’s degree from UM in
May. She will study in Germany, where she plans to
translate Gabriele Reuter’s “Das Tranenhaus” into
English.
Fielding completed his master’s degree at UM this
year. He will go to Canada’s Prince Edward Island to
study the effects of the Confederation Bridge –
which links the island with the mainland – on the
island’s tourism industry.
Kurth received her master’s degree at UM in
December 2004. She will travel to Sweden to
continue her research on boreal forest ecology.
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Radio-TV Students Finalists In National Competition
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Three UM radio-television students placed as national
finalists in the Society of Professional Journalists
Mark of Excellence Awards.
Stan Pillman, a senior from Chicago, placed in the
radio features category for a story on gambling
addiction. The story aired on Montana Public Radio.
Pillman is this year’s news director at UM-based KBGA
College Radio.
Dustin Blanchet of Dutton and Van Redpath of Great
Falls received national finalist recognition in the
television news photography category for their story
on students and gambling that aired on KECI-TV as
part of the student-produced “UM News” program.
Blanchet and Redpath graduated in May.
Blanchet also received national recognition in the
television sports photography category for a “UM
News” story he shot on former Griz runner Scott
McGowan.
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Exhibit, Film Celebrate Life Of Evelyn Cameron
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The Montana Historical Society’s nationally acclaimed
exhibit “Photographing Montana 1894-1928: The
World of Evelyn Cameron” opens Oct. 19 at UM’s
Montana Museum of Art and Culture.
The opening takes place from 7 to 7:45 p.m. in the
museum’s Paxson Gallery, located in the University’s
Performing Arts and Radio/Television Center.
Immediately following the opening, a special
screening of the one-hour Montana PBS
documentary “Evelyn Cameron, Pictures from a
Worthy Life” will take place in the Montana Theatre.
The exhibit includes 47 striking photographs
reproduced from Cameron’s glass plate nitrate
negatives that record the early days on the western
frontier and the coming of the homesteaders that
changed the face of the land forever. Cameron came
to Montana from England in 1889 with her naturalist
husband, Ewen, and took up photography in 1894.
The exhibit has been featured in numerous national
publications and electronic productions, including
Smithsonian magazine and the Charles Kuralt CBS
Sunday Morning program.
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Site-Specific Dance Performances Are This Weekend
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The Department of Drama/Dance at UM will
present “UM Dancers on Location: A Site-Specific
Dance Performance” at 1:30 p.m. Saturday and
Sunday, Oct. 8-9.
During the free performance the audience will begin
at the Oval at the center of campus and then walk
as a group to seven separate performance sites.
This year’s program features seven pieces, including
choreography by drama/dance majors and former
students. An improvisational structure directed by
UM dance faculty member Nicole Bradley Browning
also will be featured.
In addition, dance majors Aubrey Eayrs and Gillian
Todd have created a dance with the climbing wall in
UM’s Fitness and Recreation Center. Graduate
student Emily Potter will perform a haunting solo in
the middle room of the Art Annex.
Ann Johnson, a UM dance program graduate from
New Orleans, will celebrate that city and honor the
victims and survivors of Hurricane Katrina in a piece
near the Clark Fork River and the pedestrian
footbridge.
Audience members are encouraged to wear their
walking shoes and enjoy the beauty of the seasons
while taking in this innovative performance.
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Griz Fight Off Wildcats At Homecoming
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The Montana Grizzlies football defense forced four
turnovers to lead the way as UM defeated the
visiting Weber State Wildcats 24-19 last Saturday in
a Big Sky Conference game.
A Homecoming crowd of 23,773 watched a seesaw
game in which the lead exchanged hands four times
and the Griz defense made a crucial stand on the
Wildcats' final possession to preserve the victory.
The fourth-ranked Grizzlies continue their 2005 Big
Sky Conference schedule this weekend, playing the
25th-ranked Idaho State Bengals Saturday in ISU's
Holt Arena. Kickoff is 3:05 p.m. The game can be
seen live on KPAX-TV in Missoula and on Montana
Television Network stations statewide.
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Soccer Drops Two In Washington
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Montana Soccer lost its Big Sky Conference opener
1-0 to Eastern Washington Friday night in Cheney,
Wash. Montana recorded a season-high 19 shots in
the match, while Eastern Washington managed only
nine. Montana was led offensively by junior Lindsay
Winans, who tallied a team-best four shots. Junior
Lily Coble and freshman Rachael Mayer added three
shots apiece.
Sunday afternoon, Washington State University’s
goal in the last minute of play gave the Cougars a 2-
1 victory over the Grizzlies in Pullman, Wash.
Montana outshot WSU 7-2 in the first half, but the
Cougars came back with eight shots to the Grizzlies'
one in the second. Sophomore Mahlleace Tomsin and
freshman Rachael Mayer led the Griz attack from the
midfield position. Tomsin took one shot and scored
UM's only goal of the match early in the first half.
Mayer tallied four shots, one on goal.
The Grizzlies fall to 2-7-1 on the year.
UM continues its 2005 Big Sky Conference schedule
on the road this week with matches at Northern
Arizona and Sacramento State. The Grizzlies have a
7 p.m. contest with the Lumberjacks tonight, Oct. 7,
at Lumberjack Stadium in Flagstaff, Ariz. Next they
square off against the Hornets at 1 p.m. Sunday at
Hornet Soccer Field in Sacramento, Calif.
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Volleyball Loses To Cats
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Montana Volleyball dropped a three-game match
Friday night at Montana State, falling 24-30, 19-30,
27-30. The game was the Grizzlies' only match of the
weekend.
With the loss, Montana dropped to 0-3 in Big Sky
Conference play, 10-7 overall. Junior Claudia Houle
led Montana with 14 kills.
The team returns home this weekend to host
Portland State Friday and Eastern Washington
Saturday. Both matches will be at 7 p.m. at UM's
West Auxiliary Gym.
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