CATCALLS
Getting your diploma doesn't guarantee you'll be getting a job. That's where Career Services comes in. it's holding three workshops today to help prepare you for the job market jungle. First, be in the Santa Rita Room of the Student Union between 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. for the Mock Interview Workshop. Then head over to the lower level of Old Main to have your rŽeacute;sumŽeacute; critiqued between 10 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. With these two workshops under your belt, you should be ready to end your day with the Job Search Workshop. It runs from noon to 1 p.m. in the African American Student Center. Call Career Services at 621-2588 for more information.
If you finish polishing your business appearance early, pat yourself on the back for being so industrious. Then skip on over to Gallagher Theatre and reward yourself with an informative and interesting discussion. (P.S. Employers like well-rounded individuals.) Thomas Patterson (professor, department of music) will help round out the last few lectures in the Building Academic Community Speaker Series with his talk on "SAMBA! The Guitar in Latin America." Sue Robison has more information for you at 621-4700.
Show up to Room A314 of the Main Library at 2 p.m. today to participate in the workshop with the longest name yet this semester: "The Speaker's Series: Panel Discussions and Student Interactions on Resources for Research and Writing in English Composition Classes and Courses Across the Curriculum." (whew!) The title of this part of the series is "Learning to Look: Using Visual Resources" - join librarians, archivists and staff from the Center for Creative Photography as they help you locate and employ art in your research. Free refreshments will be served. Give Louise Greenfield a ring at 621-9919 for more information.
The Open Forum for VP Research begins its second stint today in the Rincon Room of the Student Union. Be there from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. and hear Graduate College Dean Thomas J. Hixon's ideas, opinions and promises about research and graduate studies issues. Call Kathy Ott at 621-2711for info.
Penn and Teller are in Tucson tonight to perform their unusual set of magic tricks, illusions and humor for you at Centennial Hall. Before you hit the 7:30 p.m. show, however, it may behoove you to meander over to Room 102 of the Center for English as a Second Language building to hear Glenda Bonin's informative discussion on magic at 6:45 p.m. Don't worry; it won't spoil the show. Call the Centennial Hall Box Office at 621-3341 for ticket information.
-compiled by Kim Stravers
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