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Staff Reports
Arizona Daily Wildcat
April 22, 1998
Today on Campus
- Before you pour out your feelings to that special someone through e-mail, make sure you are Using E-Mail Effectively. Learn about the privacy and legal issues relating to e-mail at this morning's workshop from 10 to noon. You can explore the issues, legalities, language use and interpretation of e-mail in Room 214 of the University Services building. To register for the workshop, call 621-7701 or e-mail jimbray@u.arizona.edu
- UA's Rob Piccoli, UA graduate student, speaks on "Spectroscopic and Chromatographic Characterization of Chemically Modified Silica Sorbents." This afternoon's seminar begins at 4 in Room 216 of the Chemistry and Biology Sciences building.
- Norma Field of the University of Chicago gives you something to think about at 4 this afternoon in the Anthropology building. Attend "Thinking About Comfort Women: Problems of Discursivity - Between History, Nature and Politics" in Room 216.
- You are what you eat, so do you know what you are? If you don't want to deal with the hassles of watching what you eat, turn the job over to Weight Watchers. A new 10-week weight watching session will be held from noon to 1 p.m. in the University Services building, Room 214. To start the program, you must pay the $50 co-payment. For additional information, and further class schedules, call 621-2493.
- The AZ Jazz II Band presents Blues, Swing and Funk at 8 tonight. The AZ Jazz II Band consists of UA students playing classic and modern big band jazz. Join in the concert fun at Crowder Hall of the Fine Arts Complex. The special guest of the evening will be winner of the 1998 Tucson Jazz Society college scholarship competition, Tom Broccolo.
- What's it like to be human? Alison Deming of the Poetry Center will tell you today from 12:15 to 12:50 in Gallagher Theatre. Deming presents this week's Building Academic Community speech "The Edges of the Civilized World: An Essay on Being Human."
- Take a guided tour through some surprising mathematical "facts" today at the Mathematical Mystery Tour movie. Learn about math theories and numerical evidence for theorems from 4 to 5 p.m. in Family and Consumer Resources, Room 202.
-compiled by Kate Longworth
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