From su-infocus at southwestern.edu Fri Sep 8 08:58:15 2006 From: su-infocus at southwestern.edu (su-infocus@southwestern.edu) Date: Fri Sep 8 08:59:32 2006 Subject: [InFocus] In Focus 9/8 Message-ID: <450176F7.40606@southwestern.edu> IN FOCUS: September 8, 2006 * TOP NEWS * *CALENDAR * *SOUTHWESTERN, ROUND ROCK HIGH SCHOOLS PARTNER ON UNIQUE THEATRE PROJECT* *September* *9* Southwestern Invitational, cross country *10* Southwest Wind Quintet, 11 a.m., McCombs Ballroom *12* Women's soccer vs. The University of Texas at Tyler, 4 p.m. *15* Board of Visitors meeting *15* Volleyball vs. The University of Texas at Dallas, 3 p.m. *15* Volleyball vs. Emory University, 7 p.m. *16* Volleyball vs. Houston Baptist University, 2 p.m. *16* Volleyball vs. East Texas Baptist University, 6 p.m. *19* Faculty recital, Kiyoshi Tamagawa, piano, 7 p.m., Caldwell-Carvey Foyer *22* Men's soccer vs. Millsaps College, 2 p.m. *22* Women's soccer vs. Millsaps College, 4 p.m. 22 Friday Night Live, Amalia Ortiz, 8 p.m., The Cove *24* Men's soccer vs. Rhodes College, noon *24* Women's soccer vs. Rhodes College, 2 p.m. *29* Women's soccer vs. University of Dallas, 2 p.m. *29* Men's soccer vs. Colorado College, 4 p.m. Can a play change people's attitudes about difficult subjects such as race and alternative lifestyles? A California theater company thinks so, and they are bringing their unique form of theater to Southwestern University and the Round Rock Independent School District. The theater company, which is called Fringe Benefits, is using a grant it has received to bring a Theatre for Social Justice Institute titled "Race and High School Students" to Williamson County. The project will begin with a series of five workshops that will be held evenings during the week of Sept. 12-19 at McNeil High School in Round Rock. At these workshops, representatives from Fringe Benefits will listen to students from Round Rock high schools describe real discrimination problems at their school. They then will work with the students to create a play based on the incidents described. For more information on Fringe Benefits, visit their Web site at www.cootieshots.org. Read the entire story . * EVENTS * GROUNDBREAKING FOR SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY HABITAT HOUSE TO BE HELD SEPT. 9 The formal groundbreaking for Southwestern's Habitat for Humanity house in Georgetown will be held this Saturday, Sept. 9, at 9:30 a.m. at 1706 Candee St. This is located on the Old Mill property near the corner of 17th Street and Leander Road. The Southwestern community has raised more than $50,000 for the project and more than 200 students have signed up to help with it. The house will be the future home for Olga Chairez and her children Eduardo and Kimberly. *WYCLEF TO PERFORM AT SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY SEPT. 21 * Grammy award-winning singer Wyclef Jean will be the featured performer at a concert to be held at Southwestern University Sept. 21. The concert will begin at 8 p.m. in the Corbin J. Robertson Center. Tickets for the concert are $15 for the general public and will be available online Monday, Sept. 11 at www.southwestern.edu/wyclef. Wyclef is currently on a major concert tour with Shakira that includes performances at Madison Square Garden and Houston's Toyota Center. He will be performing at Southwestern in between concerts in Corpus Christi and San Antonio. Read the entire story . *SOUTHWEST WINDS TO PERFORM SEPT. 10* The Sarofim School of Fine Arts, Music Department, will present the Southwest Winds, The United States Air Force Band of the West from Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas, Sunday, Sept. 10, at 3 p.m. in the McCombs Ballrooms. Southwest Winds members hold degrees from universities across the nation and have vast experience performing with some of the finest ensembles and musicians in the world. The group performs more than 100 concerts a year throughout the Southwest. This performance is free and open to the public. For more information about this event and other fine arts events at Southwestern University, call The Sarofim School of Fine Arts at 512-863-1379. MEDIA COVERAGE The /Williamson County Sun/ ran an article about the groundbreaking for the SU Habitat for Humanity house Sept. 9. NOTABLES *Eileen Cleere*, associate professor of English, delivered a paper at the annual North American Victorian Studies Association conference Aug. 31-Sept. 3. Her paper, "Aesthetic Decay: Decadence and Late-Victorian Medical Fiction" is part of her book project on the impact of Victorian sanitary reform on aesthetic philosophy. *Lynn Guziec*, assistant professor of chemistry, *Frank Guziec*, professor of chemistry, *Kimberly Larson* '04 and *Jennifer Lang* '02 were co-authors on two papers dealing with anti-cancer drug development: "Structure-activity studies with cytotoxic anthrapyrazoles" in /Oncology Reports/ and "A 3D-QSAR study of anthrapyrazole analogs of the anticancer agents losoxantrone and piroxantrone" in /Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling/. *Aaron Prevots*, assistant professor of French, interviewed singer-songwriter *Eric Hanke* '01, to find out more about the process behind writing, recording and promoting his debut CD Autumn Blues. The interview can be read at http://www.southwestern.edu/~prevots/ehinterview1.html . *Mary Hale Visser*, professor of art, will have work in the annual Women and Their Work Invitational RED DOT show Sept. 14-Oct. 1. The gallery is nationally known for its exhibitions and programs in Texas. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.southwestern.edu/pipermail/su-infocus/attachments/20060908/f986e4d8/attachment.html From su-infocus at southwestern.edu Fri Sep 15 08:42:22 2006 From: su-infocus at southwestern.edu (su-infocus@southwestern.edu) Date: Fri Sep 15 08:43:39 2006 Subject: [InFocus] In Focus 9/15 Message-ID: <450AADBE.60500@southwestern.edu> IN FOCUS: September 15, 2006 * TOP NEWS * *CALENDAR * *SOUTHWESTERN TO HOST PEACE CONFERENCE OCT. 11-12* *September* *15* Board of Visitors meeting *15* Volleyball vs. The University of Texas at Dallas, 3 p.m. *15* Volleyball vs. Emory University, 7 p.m. *16* Volleyball vs. Houston Baptist University, 2 p.m. *16* Volleyball vs. East Texas Baptist University, 6 p.m. *19* Faculty recital, Kiyoshi Tamagawa, piano, 7 p.m., Caldwell-Carvey Foyer *22* Men's soccer vs. Millsaps College, 2 p.m. *22* Women's soccer vs. Millsaps College, 4 p.m. 22 Friday Night Live, Amalia Ortiz, 8 p.m., The Cove *24* Men's soccer vs. Rhodes College, noon *24* Women's soccer vs. Rhodes College, 2 p.m. *29* Women's soccer vs. University of Dallas, 2 p.m. *29* Men's soccer vs. Colorado College, 4 p.m. Long before the recent flare-up of hostilities in the Middle East, Southwestern University senior Ansa Copeland wanted to put together a conference on peace and religion. Her goal was not to address specific current events, but the general concept of peace, and how persons of different religions and conviction relate to and understand peace. The result is a conference to be held at Southwestern Oct. 11-12 titled "Making Multi-faith Connections in the Practice of Peace and Non-Violence." The highlight of the conference will be an Oct. 11 keynote speech by Arun Gandhi, grandson of famed Indian peace activist Mahatma Gandhi and founder of the M.K. Gandhi Institute for Nonviolence. Gandhi will give a speech titled "Lessons from Grandfather in Peace and Social Justice." It will begin at 7 p.m. in the Lois Perkins Chapel on the Southwestern campus. Registration for the conference is $5 for members of the Southwestern University community and $15 for the general public. Registrants may attend as many of the conference events as they wish. Persons interested in registering for the conference may download a registration form at www.southwestern.edu/peaceconference. For more information on the conference, call 512-863-1527 or write peace2006@southwestern.edu. Read the entire story . * EVENTS * FACULTY PERFORMANCE WITH KIYOSHI TAMAGAWA SEPT. 19 The Sarofim School of Fine Arts, Music Department, presents a faculty recital by pianist Kiyoshi Tamagawa Tuesday, Sept. 19, at 7 p.m. in the Caldwell-Carvey Foyer. Tuesday evening's concert will feature works from "The Well-Tempered Clavier, Book II" composed by Johann Sebastian Bach in 1744. Kiyoshi Tamagawa, professor of music and chair of the Music Department, has performed throughout the United States and in several foreign countries as a soloist and collaborative pianist. His association with the distinguished violinist Eugene Fodor over the last decade has resulted in more than 30 recitals and a CD, "Witches' Brew." Recent concerts include performances on the Bargemusic series in New York and recitals with Fodor at the Festival Internacional Cervantino in Guanajuato, Mexico, and in Mumbai, India. Other artists with whom he has played include members of the Shanghai Quartet, soprano Julianne Baird and New York Philharmonic cellist Evangeline Benedetti. The Bach cycle will be repeated at Texas State University and The University of Texas at San Antonio this fall. The performance is free and open to the public. For more information, call Lacy Vain at 512-863-1379. MEDIA COVERAGE The /Williamson County Sun/ ran an article on the upcoming Wycliff Jean concert. The /Sun/ also ran an article on the groundbreaking for the SU Habitat for Humanity house. NOTABLES In June, *Katy Ross*, assistant professor of modern languages, presented a paper titled "Representaciones de la madre en Un milagro en equilibrio de Luc?a Etxebarria" at the Asociaci?n Hisp?nica de Humanidades (Hispanic Association for the Humanities) conference in Madrid, Spain. A longer, English version of the paper was accepted for publication in a volume titled (M)Othering the Nation: Constructing and Resisting Regional and National Allegories Through the Maternal Body, which will be published by Cambridge Scholars Press in 2007. *A.J. Senchack Jr.*, professor of business and holder of the Lucy King Brown Chair in International Business, was an invited presenter and participant in a professional development workshop, "Management and the Liberal Arts," that was held at the national meeting of the Academy of Management, Aug. 13-15, in Atlanta. Participants in the workshop were from liberal arts colleges with business programs, and many of them will also be attending the national conference on the liberal arts in business education to be held at Southwestern University Nov. 8-10. This conference is being hosted by the SU business faculty. *David Tabb Stewart*, assistant professor of religion, helped facilitate the "Summer Workshop in College Teaching" at North Central College in Naperville, Ill., during July. This six-day workshop was jointly sponsored by the Society for Values in Higher Education and the Virginia Foundation for Independent Colleges. Stewart has been named director of the 2007 workshop to be held at the College of Notre Dame in Baltimore, Md. Stewart also presented a morning-long faculty seminar to the Society for Values in Higher Education's "Religion and Violence Group" titled "The Outrage at Gibeah: Judges 19-21." -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.southwestern.edu/pipermail/su-infocus/attachments/20060915/24d71879/attachment.html From su-infocus at southwestern.edu Fri Sep 22 08:51:12 2006 From: su-infocus at southwestern.edu (su-infocus@southwestern.edu) Date: Fri Sep 22 08:52:31 2006 Subject: [InFocus] In Focus 9/22 Message-ID: <4513EA50.2000001@southwestern.edu> IN FOCUS: September 22, 2006 * TOP NEWS * *CALENDAR * *RED AND CHARLINE MCCOMBS TO RECEIVE 2006 PRESIDENT'S PHILANTHROPY AWARD FROM SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY* *September* *22* Men's soccer vs. Millsaps College, 2 p.m. *22* Women's soccer vs. Millsaps College, 4 p.m. 22 Friday Night Live, Amalia Ortiz, 8 p.m., The Cove *24* Men's soccer vs. Rhodes College, noon *24* Women's soccer vs. Rhodes College, 2 p.m. *29* Women's soccer vs. University of Dallas, 2 p.m. *29* Men's soccer vs. Colorado College, 4 p.m. Red and Charline McCombs of San Antonio have been selected to receive the 2006 President's Philanthropy Award from Southwestern University. The award will be presented at a dinner on campus Sept. 28. Since 1971, the McCombs have given more than $8 million to Southwestern. The McCombs also have given generously of their time. Red McCombs has served on Southwestern's Board of Trustees since 1987 and was chair of the board from 1992 through 2000 during the historic Leadership 2000 Campaign, which raised more than $91 million. He currently serves as an honorary chair of Thinking Ahead: The Southwestern Campaign, which has a goal of $125 million. Charline McCombs was an inaugural member of Southwestern's Board of Visitors. Read the entire story here . * EVENTS * PUBLIC NIGHT AT THE FOUNTAINWOOD OBSERVATORY Southwestern University will host a public viewing at the Fountainwood Observatory from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday, Sept. 29. The Observatory is located on the northeast side of campus adjacent to the Rockwell Baseball Field. Physics Department faculty and experienced observers from the Williamson County Astronomy Club (www.williamson-astro.org) will be on hand to guide visitors through their viewing experience. On this evening, a 42 percent waxing crescent moon will be visible and Jupiter will appear low in the southwest. The summer triangle, an asterism consisting of the brightest stars of Cygnus, Aquila and Lyra, will be visible high overhead. In the eastern sky, fall constellations such as Andromeda are rising. Beautiful star clusters and ghostly nebula will dot the region along the band of the Milky Way. Fountainwood viewing nights are always free and open to the public. For weather-related updates, call the Fountainwood Observatory hotline at 512-863-1242. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ *FACULTY FORUM* In anticipation of Robert Pinsky's visit as this year's Writer's Voice author, the library will sponsor a literary discussion at the noon Faculty Forum Monday, Sept. 25, in the Lynda McCombs Room. The discussion will be led by professors Shana Bernstein, Elisabeth Piedmont-Marton, Eric Selbin and David Stewart. The campus community is invited to come, eat and share your thoughts on Pinsky's work. Sodexho will provide a hot lunch for $4.25 per person and coffee and tea will be available for 50 cents. Faculty, staff and guests are welcome to attend. *PLEASE NOTE* " Pirate Bucks" can now be used to pay for Faculty Forum lunches for those who prefer to pay this way. MEDIA COVERAGE The /Williamson County Sun/ ran an article on the collaboration between Fringe Benefits, a California theater group, Southwestern and students from the Round Rock ISD high schools to produce a play based on real-life situations of discrimination witnessed by the high school students. The /Sun/ also ran an editorial about the relationship between Southwestern University and the Georgetown community. The /San Antonio Express-News/ and the /San Antonio Business Journal /ran stories about Red and Charline McCombs receiving the 2006 President's Philanthropy Award. NOTABLES *Jason Hoogerhyde*, assistant professor of music, had two compositions, "Ebullient Echoes" for flute and "Hollow" for clarinet, performed at the College Music Society's National Conference in San Antonio Sept. 16. "Ebullient Echoes" will be performed again Nov. 2 by flutist Elizabeth Shuhan at Ithaca College in Ithaca, N.Y. *Helene Meyers*, professor of English, gave a talk to graduate students at The University of Texas at Austin about applying for jobs at liberal arts colleges. This event was sponsored by UT's English Department as part of their placement program for Ph.D. students. *David Tabb Stewart*, assistant professor of religion and philosophy, has been invited to present a paper at the Biblical Scholarship and Disabilities group of the annual meeting of the Society of Biblical Literature titled "Deafness and Temple Service: Why the Priests Don't Need to Hear." At the same conference in Washington, D.C., during November, he will present "The Politick Text: 17th Century Text-Reception of Leviticus in English" to the History of Interpretation section. In December, Stewart will read his paper "Stories as Shades: Bat-Yiftach as Specter for the Outrage at Gibeah" to the annual meeting of the Association for Jewish Studies in San Diego, Calif. This study, dealing with a horrific story of rape in the biblical world, grows out of his classroom teaching in his course at Southwestern titled Gender, Sex and Violence in the Biblical World. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.southwestern.edu/pipermail/su-infocus/attachments/20060922/ac0c680e/attachment.html From su-infocus at southwestern.edu Fri Sep 29 08:42:13 2006 From: su-infocus at southwestern.edu (su-infocus@southwestern.edu) Date: Fri Sep 29 08:43:35 2006 Subject: [InFocus] In Focus 9/29 Message-ID: <451D22B5.80104@southwestern.edu> IN FOCUS: September 29, 2006 * TOP NEWS * *CALENDAR * *SOUTHWESTERN STUDENT TO BE RECOGNIZED FOR WORK AS ADVOCATE FOR THE DISABLED* *September* *29* Women's soccer vs. University of Dallas, 2 p.m. *29* Men's soccer vs. Colorado College, 4 p.m. *October* *1* Women's soccer vs. Schreiner University, noon *1* Men's soccer vs. Texas Lutheran University, 2 p.m. *3* Mock Interviews, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., McCook-Crain Building *4* Career Questions in the Cove, 5-6:30 p.m., The Cove *4* Cove Concert Series, Open Mic Night, 8 p.m., The Cove *6* Volleyball vs. University of the South, 3 p.m. *6* Volleyball vs. Centre, 7 p.m. *7* Volleyball vs. DePauw, 2 p.m. *7* Volleyball vs. Oglethorp, 6 p.m. *8* Faculty recital, Eileen Meyer Russell, low brass, and Kiyoshi Tamagawa, piano, 3 p.m., Caldwell-Carvey Foyer *8* Volleyball vs. Rhodes College, 2 p.m. *9* Career Encounters: Blast-Off, noon-1 p.m., Bishops Lounge, McCombs Campus Center *9* Careers in Health, 4-5 p.m., Howry Center *10* Careers in Accounting, 4:15 - 5:30 p.m., Howry Center *11* Careers in Law, 4-5 p.m., Howry Center *11* Wednesday Wisdom, 5-6:30 p.m., McCook-Crain Building *11-12* Peace Conference 2006 *12* Making a Living...Making a Difference, 4-6 p.m., Howry Center *13* Volleyball vs. Lakeland College, 2 p.m. *13* Volleyball vs. Hardin-Simmons University, 7 p.m. *13* Chart Your Course: Pizza & Open House, 11 a.m.-1 p.m., McCook-Crain Building *14* Volleyball vs. Ohio Northern University, noon *14* Volleyball vs. Washington & Lee University, 5 p.m. First-year student Amy Litzinger will be recognized in October for her efforts to improve the lives of persons with disabilities. Litzinger is one of six students selected to receive a $5,000 scholarship from the Texas Conference for Women. The award will be presented at a conference Oct. 12 that is expected to be attended by more than 8,000 businesswomen from across the state. Litzinger is receiving the scholarship given to a student who plans to pursue a career in the area of public service. In her essay applying for the scholarship, Litzinger detailed how her career path has been shaped by the fact that she was born with quadriplegia. She has been an active advocate for the disabled since the 9th grade, when she helped her Girl Scout troop organize an ability awareness fair that was attended by 2,000 children. That same year, she testified before the Texas Legislature against a budget proposal that would have cut services to 75,000 persons with disabilities. Litzinger is a board member of the Texas Youth Leadership Forum and is one of 12 youths from across the country selected for the National Council on Disability Youth Advisory Committee, which advises Congress on issues related to persons with disabilities. Texas Gov. Rick Perry also appointed her to the Texas Children's Policy Council and in July 2005, she helped former President George H.W. Bush give out awards at an event at the Kennedy Center marking the 15th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. She has organized summer conferences to train youth in how to be leaders and has taught workshops to help teens with disabilities learn how to testify before their state legislatures. " People with disabilities must always be advocates, both on the federal and state level, because almost everything is touched by federal and state initiatives," Litzinger says. Last summer she served as an intern with Texas Rep. Mark Strama's "Campaign Academy." Litzinger is majoring in political science and English. After graduating from Southwestern, she hopes to earn a master's degree in public policy or attend law school. First Lady of Texas Anita Perry called Litzinger this month to tell her that she had been selected to receive the scholarship from the Texas Conference for Women. " I was surprised and very excited to learn the news," Litzinger says. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ *SOUTHWESTERN STUDENTS STAR IN NEW VIDEO* Two students from Southwestern play a starring role in a new video that has been distributed to every middle and high school in the state of Texas. Rebecca Rivera and Angelica Castillo agreed to be filmed last spring for a video the Texas Education Agency (TEA) was producing to show middle and high school students what to expect in college. Rivera is one of three students featured in the English version of the video and Castillo is one of four students featured in the Spanish version of the video. The video covers topics such as study skills, the college classroom, campus life and living away from home. Numerous Southwestern faculty members, students and facilities appear in the video. TEA produced the videos for its GEAR UP project, which is funded by the U.S. Department of Education. To learn more about the project, visit http://www.teagearup.com/. * EVENTS * SEE GREAT THEATRE IN NEW YORK CITY Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious! "Mary Poppins," the smash London musical, a co-production of Disney Theatrical and Cameron Mackintosh, glides into the historic New Amsterdam Theatre, and Southwestern has tickets to this highly anticipated new musical based on the award-winning movie "Mary Poppins." The Sarofim School of Fine Arts Department of Theatre is again sponsoring two New York Theatre trips, one this Thanksgiving and one next Easter. Both trips include tickets to the American premiere of "Mary Poppins" plus two other exciting theatrical productions, including the critically acclaimed and Tony award-winning musical "The Drowsy Chaperone" and the award-winning production of Simon Grey's play "Butley" starring Nathan Lane. The Thanksgiving tour dates are Wednesday, Nov. 22, through Sunday, Nov. 26, which coincides with the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade. Prices vary depending on the number of people per room, but include: round-trip airfare from Austin to New York City, three Broadway shows, four nights at The Edison Hotel right in the theatre district, airport-hotel transfers by private motor coach and all hotel taxes and tips. The Easter trip is Thursday, April 5, 2007 through Monday, April 9, 2007. Register by sending a non-refundable deposit of $100 per person, with the check payable to Southwestern University, together with your name, address, telephone number, your choice of accommodations (four, triple, double or single) for either or both trips. Send the check to: Kerry Bechtel, Tour Director Theatre Department Southwestern University P.O. Box 770 Georgetown, TX 78627-0770 The balance is due approximately one month prior to departure. You won't find a less expensive way to spend your holiday in the theatre capital of the world - New York City. For more information, call Kerry Bechtel at 512-863-1701. Space is limited. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ *FACULTY FORUM* Due to Yom Kippur, there is no Faculty Forum scheduled for Monday, Oct. 2. MEDIA COVERAGE President Jake B. Schrum was quoted in an article in the /Austin American-Statesman/ about the release of the Spellings Commission Report on the future of higher education. Read the story here . The /Austin American-Statesman/ and the /Williamson County Sun/ ran an editorial by President Schrum about the Spellings Commission Report. Read the editorial here . Kathleen Juhl, associate professor of theatre, was quoted in a piece that aired on KUT Saturday. Listen to the story here . Provost Jim Hunt was interviewed for a story on KUT radio about increasing minority enrollment in colleges. Listen to the story here . The /Williamson County Sun/ ran an article about senior Sarah Morris' study abroad experience in London. NOTABLES Senior *Cassandra Ashby* is one of three students selected statewide to receive a scholarship from the Texas Association of School Personnel Administrators (TASPA) for the 2006-2007 school year. The scholarship will be presented at the organization's annual awards luncheon in Austin Dec. 7. Ashby expects to graduate in May 2007 with dual certification in general PreK-4 and special education PreK-12. She hopes to teach elementary school after graduation. This is the seventh year in a row that a student in Southwestern University's Teacher Certification Program has received a TASPA scholarship. *Edward L. Kain*, professor of sociology and University Scholar, served as the external reviewer for the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at Stetson University in DeLand, Fla., Sept. 13-15. *Alicia L. Moore*, assistant professor of education, has been invited to present a teacher workshop to public school teachers and university historians at the Association for the Study of African American Life History's (ASALH) 90th Annual Conference in Atlanta, Ga., in September. Moore was also appointed by ASALH to be a co-project manager for the teacher workshop series during the ASALH 2006 Conference in Buffalo, N.Y. The mission of ASALH is to promote, research, preserve, interpret and disseminate information about Black life, history and culture to the global community. *Aaron Prevots*, assistant professor of French, had eight poems that he translated from the original French by Jacques R?da accepted for publication in the annual literature and arts journal The Dirty Goat, Vol. 16. The poems are "The Return from the Dance Hall," "The Invisible," "The Railcar," "By Leroy's Place," "Four Seascapes" III and IV, "The Thaw" and "The Bakery." They are excerpted from Return to Calm, a poetry-in-translation manuscript now under consideration by Host Publications, The Dirty Goat's parent company. Sample work may be viewed at http://www.southwestern.edu/~prevots/indexreda.html . Prevots also co-organized the national conference "Pedagogy and Digital Technologies: Language Learning in the 21st Century," at Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Ind., Sept. 29-Oct. 1. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.southwestern.edu/pipermail/su-infocus/attachments/20060929/9bb05439/attachment.html