volume seven, number thirty-three august 21, 1977
NEW FACES AT SPEA, WOMEN'S CENTER
Two outstanding Indiana women are assuming leadership posts at the School of Public and Environment_~]_ _Affairs and at the Continu!n_g Education C_~_n_t~!" __ for Women.
A SPEA graduate with considerable experience in public administration has been named ~nternship. placement and career counselor fo_!." SPEA on ttie __ Indianapolis campus. Magnolia (Mag) Mallory will be responsible for working with students and alumni in career counseling and job placement.
SPEA Associate Dean Patricia Edgeworth Cunnea said Ms. Mallory will help students and graduates develop care~r goa~s; find employm~rrt in local, state and Federal government or business and industry, and obtain professional experience through the SPEA public service and field study programs. She will also assist units of government in recruiting qualified, trained applicants.
She earned her bachelor of science degree in political science at the University of Pittsburgh. She was awarded a two-year fellowship by the Ford Foundation and the National Association for the Society of Public Administrators to pursue a graduate degree in SPEA, receiving a master's degree in public affairs.
Her professional experience includes posts with the Marion County Criminal Court as a probation officer, with the Marion County Human Rights Commission as an employment investigator and with the Indiana Department of Commerce as a legal research administrative officer.
She became project director for the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission Project of the Indiana Civil Rights Commission before resuming her studies full- time.
The SPEA internship, placement and career office is at- Ball Residence, Room 118, Ext. 4656.
Pam Peterson~ho h8-_~-~~~ ~itl!_ ti!~ _IU_!'_pl _p_!yis:i_.on of -Continuing Studies as c:_onference co:-ordinator sin~~_la§_t ~.I>.~~mbe_!.1 has beefi appointed assistant
4.!.E~~_!:o_!' !2.E _the Continuil!& E9_y...f.at_i_on_ Center for Women at IUPUI_.
Formerly adult programs director for the YWCA at Kokomo, Ms. Peterson holds both bachelor's and master's degrees and is working toward her doctorate in adult education at I.U., specializing in women's programming.
The Center for Women, 1301 East 38th Street, provides courses, workshops and seminars for women and offers career and education counseling for the women of central Indiana.
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WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE & SOMETIMES WHY
Exhibits -- Pharmacy display~ this week in University Hospital will be
Cooper Laboratories on Monday, Roerig Co. on. Wednesday and Ayerst Laboratories on Friday.
!101?
Seen~-=- The second and final day of walk-j.n _registration __ is_ ~onday at Cavanaugh Hall.Toot -- The 54-year-old refurbished I.U. calliope will put in a special appearance this week at the Indiana State Fair. The wagon will be featured in the Farmers' Day Parade on Tuesday. The six-ton apparatus, with 32 whistles and 360 gallons of water, can be heard for up to five miles.
New Schedule -- The Rev. Myles H. Smith, newly appointed director of the IUPUI Catholic Student Center, has announced a revised schedule for the facility.
Starting Wednesday, Father Smith will offer a daily 12:10 p.m. Mass and Sunday Mass at 5:30 p.m. Also the IUPUI Newman Club will begin sponsored a mid-week dinner each Wednesday from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. on September 7. All such events will be held at the Center, known as Bellarmine House, 1309 West Michigan Street.
~ We Go Again -- Wednesday is the first day of classes for the fall semester.
Invited All members of the IUMC Chapter of Sigma Xi, new graduate students and new faculty are invited to the annual Sigma Xi reception in the Union Building Roof Lounge. Date is M?~4~August 29, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Refreshments will be served.
Baseball Bonanza -- Wednesday, August 31, is IUPUI Night at Bush Stadium. Come before the real game (Indians vs. Evansville) and watch the IUPUI faculty-student softball match. More details to come, but mark your calendars now.
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WOMEN & POLITICS
A: project aimed at preparing women for more _thaE_ju~t "cut ~!le! pa~J.e" role_s _in politics will be launched this fall by SPEA. The project, "Training Wom~n
for Public Service Careers as Elected Officials," will be funded by a $33,000 grant from the Indiana Commission for Higher Education, under provisions of Title I of the Higher Education Act of 1965, and will be conducted by the school's Indianapolis-based Division of Public Service.
Five identical one-day Saturday workshops will be offered in October and November, using the facilities of I.U. campuses at Gary, South Bend, Fort Wayne, Indianapolis, and Bloomington, explained June Knight Shassere, staff associate with the division and project director.
The training will focus on ways to seek and_ wi_l!_n_Q!ll.i~~tion an.<f eJ,ection, as well as on major issues which confront elected officials--budgeting, taxation, public works projects, and the like.
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"In other words," the director said, "the workshops will demonstrate how to get nominated, how to get elected, and then, how best to serve the public."
By conducting the workshops in the fall of a non-election year, she added, participants will have several months lead time before the 1978 primaries.
I~~_£) ___ ironic, s!ie ~~~e_d.1 tha~--w:~men run for, and are elected to, s~ few public offices when th~_ar~_~onsistently the majority of __ th.~ vq~J.ng public.
In the 1976 national election, 77.5 million women were eligible to vote compared to 68.9 million men. Of these, 45.6 million women did vote compared to 41 million men.
And yet, she continued, only nine percent of state legislators and only five percent of the mayors and city council members nationwide are women. There are 17 women in the U.S. House of Representatives and no women in the Senate.
The last Indiana General Assembly had three women in the Senate and two in the House.
At Indianapolis the classes are scheduled for October 1,8,29 and November ~,
12 in the School of Nursing Building. Enrollment will be limited to 100 women at each location in the state. For more information, call Ext. 3736.
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NEWS 'N' NOTES FROM HERE 'N' THERE
Studying Hours -- Effective Monday (August 22), the schedule for the School of Medicine Library will be as follows: 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Thursday;
8 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Fridays, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays, and 1 p.m. to 11 p.m.
on Sundays.
E_C!_~ing Hours -- The following is a list of when and where you can eat on campus:
Union Building Cafeteria, 6:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Friday
Deli Sugar-Shack, 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday;
7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Saturdays
Ice Cream Bar, 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Friday; noon to 7 p.m. on weekends
Library Hideway Cafeteria, 10 a.m. to 6:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday;
10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Fridays
Deli, 8 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. on Fridays
Swimming Hours -- The swimming pool in the Union Building is open from 10:30 a.m.
to 9 p.m. Monday through Friday, and from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. on weekends.
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· 1 : •A News Bureau. Publication. , • ' · .
. ::· •. •·· . · , lnd1.ana Un.1vers1ty-Purdue U·.·nivers1ty at Indianapolis
''·'··.1'· 1100 West Michigan Street
'/\'. lnd1anapohs, Indiana 46202
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GREEN SHEET'S FRIENDLY AD SERVICE
Need a Ride? -- Looking for riders from Irvington and South Arlington area.
Please call 357-1204 after 6 p.m.
Found -- One double switch. Package reads -1- BIJC Key. Found in back of Allied Health Building. May be claimed at campus Post Office.
Pettables -- Guinea pigs, English female and Abyssinian male, 16 months old, both have 15-gallon aquarium, food dish, water bottle and one pound of food. Asking
$12 each. Call 247-0316 after 5 p.m.
House for Sale -- Three-bedroom brick home in 30tP, and_!_~~-~~~r_ea, two-car garage, central air conditioning, screened front porch, full finished basement, gas heat, fenced yard. Call 923-5195.
House for Sale -- Three-bedroom home on south side, 1 1/2 baths, attached one-car garage, fenced back yard, may be sold with refrigerator, stove, washer and dryer, water softener. Call 882-0526 or 888-0824.
House for Sale -- Four-bedroom brick and cedar colonial, Williamsburg decor,
excellent condition, one-half acre, includes most extras: central air, fireplace, electric air filter. Near 56th and Kessler. Call 787-7429 evenings.
Furnished House for Rent -- Spacious five-bedroom house on large wooded lot, 15 minutes from campus, available January-June, 1978. Call 283-6998.
Cars -- 19lQ ~r~4ley GT, red, less than 500 miles. $4,750. Call 342-6140 1971 Volkswagen Beetle, $1,000 or best offer. Call 856-3983 after 5 p.m • . . 1976 Honda 550, four cylinder, 1,450 miles, showroom new. $1,500. Call 786-1220 after 5:30 p.m.
Potpourri -- For special occasions and special cake~ to fit them call 924-9575 Upright piano. $100. Double maple bedstead. $35. Call 251-3517 after 6 p.m.