green sheet
volume sixteen, number sixteen
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april 27, 1986
THUR.'lDAY TO BE ''KOST HONORABLE" FOR IUPUI
M ay 1 -- this Thursday -- will be a red-letter day for IUPUI to honor its own, its own faculty and staff and
it~own leader, Dr. Glenn w. Irwin, Jr. who will
retire June 30. The day's events will come in three parts, starting with a Faculty Council meeting at 3 p.m. Then, at 4 p.m. a ceremony will announce the 12 recipients of the 1986 IUPUI Recognition Experience Excellence Awards, followed by an all-campus
reception to honor Dr. Irwln. All events will be held at the Irwins' residence, 5801 Sunset Lane. The map below tells you how to get there. from all compass points.
From 1-465 Kessler Blvd.
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DIRECTIONS TO THE IRWIN RESIDENCE - 5801 Sunset Lane
More t han 50 persons have been nominated to receive the dozen Recognition Awards for exceptionally outstanding s ervice to this campus. Six faculty members and six staff members will receive certificates but they all deserve recognition. The nominees are:
Winston A. Baker, director of residence life; Richard S. Bayse, assistant
profe&sor of mil i tary science; Kary Ellen Blasingham, assistant professor of English;
Pa~ricia
A. Boaz, dean of student affairs; Vernell Russell, School of Nursing;
James
~.Carter, associate dean foT student affairs, School of Medicine; Betty Joan Cb.apple, Medical Library; Lillian Charleston, CUME, School of Education; Evelyn Cooper, Respiratory Therapy Department at Riley; Reggie Edwards, Physical Plant;
Ruth Eitnier, School of Dentistry; Dolores Fields, School of Education; Donald E. Fleenor, associate professor of psychology; Phyllis Gillespie, School of
Education; Sonna Goodin, University Hospital; Tony Gryszowka, duplicating center;
Edwin T. Harper, associate profe ssor of biochemistry .
Also Jan Hoffman, University Hospital; Carol Jenkins, recorder, School of
Business; Pat Jenkins, Department of Biochemistry, School of Medicine; Michael
Jones, Ball Residence; Fred Joyce, Riley; Joy Kramer, Instructional Media
Services; Anne T. Krug, School of Medicine; William R. Kolsrud, associate
professor of accounting; Roberta L. Lackey, Riley; James LeFlore, University
HoGpital; Lucille Like, Cheer Guild Gift Shop; George R. Lindle, director of
budgeting and fiscal affairs; Ethel Mau, registrar's office; Beth A. Mayberry,
Tele communication
Pr~jectOffice; Barbara McQueen, Student Affairs;
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Carol Morgan, Department of Economics; Marsha Neawedde, dean's office, School of Liberal Arts; Dale Neuburger, manager of natatorium and track and field stadium;
Shirley R. Newhouse, psychiatry; Charles J. Palenik, associate professor of oral microbiology, School of Dentistry; M. Joan Perisho, Guided Studies Program, and Dorothy Pock, School of Nursing.
Also Frances Dodson Rhome, director, Institute for Humanities Research; Beverly S.
Richards, associate professor of nursing; Eddie Roush, Physical Plant; Jill Shelby, University Hospital; Travis Shipp, associate professor of education;
Marjorie Spiegel, vice president's office; Deb Steuer, Riley; Kaykavoos Valiyi, Union Building; Jane Vollmer, School of Nursing; Richard Wallace, Physical Plant; Stella F. Wickware, registrar's office; Adeline Wilson, Riley Research, and Jim Wyatt, accounting.
'TIS THE SEASON OF HOSANNAS AND HONORS
Two faculty members from the campus were singled out and cited for excellence at the annual Founders Day ceremonies in Bloomington. Ann C. Marriner, who earlier this
year received the Edward C. Moore Award for Outstanding Teaching, was named the recipient of the Herman Frederic Lieber Award.
And Rowland A. Sherrill, associate professor and chairman of religious studies and adjunct professor of American studies, received an Amoco Foundation Teaching award. It has been written of Sherrill that he has the ability to challenge his students to new and more sophisticated insights about the interdisciplinary nature of the study of religions and that he fosters an atmosphere 1.n which "students genuinely want to learn."
More faculty and staff won accolades at the 12th annual Student Activities Honors Banquet. Faculty winners were Dr. James E. Carter, associate dean for student affairs, School of Medicine, the Lola L. Lohse Faculty Appreciation Award; J. Roger Ware, associate professor of psychology, School of Science, Faculty Adviser of the Year, and Mrs. Robert H. Shellhamer and daughters Susan and Judy accepted the Robert H. Shellhamer Outstanding Educator Award honoring her late husband.
Judy Skovmand (medicine) and Charmaine Kremer and Jan Keely (Science) won the
Extra Smile Award, while Barbara McQueen (Student Affairs) received a Special Kudos Award.
NEWS & NOTES FROM HERE
1N
1THERE
Phone Fun -- Telecommunication Services is offering lead counselor training classes in the new Training Center in the basement of the Education/Social Work Building, Entry 4, Room 0010. Lead counselors may elect to register assistants for the classes. Class size is limited to one lead counselor or assistant for every 15-20 station users. Classes for medical center counselors will be May 29-June 6, for the rest of IUPUI they'll be
June 9-June 12, and for off-premise locations the class will be June 13. Counselors can choose to attend from 8 a.m. to noon or from 1-5 p.m. To register, call 632-4504
by May 2.
Meet -- The Indiana Coalition of Blacks in Higher Education will have its annual meeting May 2 at Marian College. Main speakers are William Harris, president of Paine College and former director of the CIC program at IU, and J.P. Lizack, director of the Office of Manpower Studies at Purdue. For info, call Myra Mason at Ext. 2959.
World of Chimps -- Famous animal behaviorist Jane Goodall will speak May 5 about her work with chimpanzees in a slide show and lecture sponsored by the Indianapolis Zoo in
cooperation with the L.S.B. Leakey Foundation. The presentation, "In the Shadow of
Man," will be given at 7:30 p.m. in Clowes Hall. Tickets, available at all Ticketmaster
sites, are $4 for the public, $3 for Zoo Society members and $2 for students.
Latin Rhythms -- The IUPUI Office of Pan American Events and Language Programs recognizes the efforts of Hispanic students in the School of Music at Bloomington and Jose Mariano Morales, director of the first Latin American Jazz Ensemble at IU. The Ensemble will perform a free concert April 28 at 8 p.m. in the Musical Arts Center. For info, call Marta Cruz at Ext. 7314. ·
Goodwill Needs Goods -- Goodwill Industries of Central Indiana needs donated items this spring to provide jobs and training programs for people with disabilities. More than 100 disabled employees depend on the contributions of reusable goods to keep their jobs.
They can use any reusable items, but especially need women's clothing and usable
housewares. So, take your items to the nearest donation center -- an attended center is right across the river at Goodwill, 1635 W. Michigan -- or call 636-6331 to arrange for a home pickup.
SPUTTERING & FUMING?
Is your car getting the best possible gas mileage, or is it more like 35 gallons to the mile? IUPUI and the
Indianapolis Air Pollution Control Division are conducting free auto emissions checks to see if your car is well tuned, getting good mileage and emitting less pollution.
They've been on the main campus for awhile and they'll be at Herron April 28-29 and at the 38th Street campus
April 30-May 2. The test will take only two minutes of your car's time.
CHILDREN'S PROBLEMS ON DOCKET
Emergency care for children, school dysfunction and diseases common to day care settings will be among the topics covered at the 21st Annual Indiana Multidisciplinary Child Care Conference April 30-May 1 presented by IU and held at the Airport Hilton. The conference attracts about 250 physicians
e~eryyear to hear the latest in pediatric medicine from some of the top experts in the field. Guest faculty will be coming from the University of North Carolina, University of Texas, University of Pennsylvania, Emory University and the University of California, San Francisco. They will be joining Dr. Morris Green, program director and physician-in-chief at Riley, in presenting 12 individual seminars.
POSITIONS AVAILABLE
Assistant Professor-chemistry search extended. Available July 1 in Purdue School of Science at IUPUI Columbus; 12-month position. Applicants need teaching breadth (general, quantitative, inorganic) with compatible research specialization. Salary commensurate with experience. Resume due May 14 to: Dr. Paul Bippen, 2080 Bakalar Drive, Columbus,
IN 47203.
Research Associate--Cutaneous
On~ology/MohsMicrographic Surgery Unit.
Responsibilities divided between frozen section lab and clinical research. Bachelor's degree or higher required. Previous experience in processing frozen section preferred but not essential. Will be involved in maintenance and operation of lab, will have limited responsibilities in patient care, and will be involved in clinical research in cutaneous oncology. Contact: Dr. C. William Hanke, Department of Dermatology,
Regenstrief #524, 1100 W. Michigan, Indianapolis 46223. Phone (317) 630-6844.
IUPUI is an AA/EO Employer
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NEB CHIEF COMING
Last year, it was the secretary of education. This year, it is John Agresto, director of the National Endowment for the Humanities. He will be in Indianapolis April 29-30 as a guest of the Institute for Humanities Research. Agresto will discuss "The State of Humanities in the Nation" at a 5:30 p.m. reception April 29 at the Indiana Committee for the Humanities, 1500 North Delaware Street. The reception is open to the public. He will speak to a group of educators from across the state at 7:45 a.m. April 30 in the Union Building cafeteria here. In the afternoon, he will talk about "The History of American Culture" with students at Broad Ripple High School.
COME RUNNING!
For several years now, IUPUI has been host to the Corporate Challenge, a day-long track athletics event organized by the Indianapolis Chamber of Commerce. The teams are entered by their sponsoring organizations, most of which are business corporations. IUPUI is qualified to enter a team, but has never done so. This year, says Gerald Arffa from the School of Engineering and Technology, we have at least 12 runners who have expressed an interest in competing. We need, he says, 37 runners and walkers,
·~enand women, from al!
all age groups. To get backing, he needs to have an expression
~finterest as soon as possible. Eligible are any full-time faculty or staff. If you're interested, just send a note to Arffa, professor of supervision, School of Engineering and Technology, or call him at Ext. 2413 by April 30. The big day is in September, but the entry deadline is June 2.
NEW SERIES TO COVER AGING
A series of seven Tuesday-10nrning programs will attract expert speakers from all over the country to cover "Topics in Aging." The series is spons0red by the School of Nursing and will be held there from 9 a.m.-noon every Tuesday, starting May 20. Here's a line-up
with the main presenters:
May 20 "New Options in Late Life: Person-Environment Interaction" with Eva
Kahana~
Department of Sociology, Case Western Reserve May 27 - "Family Caregiv . rs" with Lillian Troll, Psychology Department,
Rutgers University
June 3 - "Lifespan Perspective" with G1mhild Hagestai, College of Human Development, Pennsylvania State University
June 10 - "Older Women" with Mildred Seltzer, Scripps Foundation Gerontology Center, Miami University
June 17 - "Social Support and Health" with Meredith Minkler, School of Public Health, University of California at Berkeley
June 24 - "Future Perspectives" with Virginia Stone, profi::ssor emeritus, Duke University School of Nursing
July 1 - "Ethical Issues" with Catherine Murphy, School of Nursing, Boston College The series may be taken as a three-credit hour graduate course. For info, call
Sue Morrissey or Su Moore at Ext. 4318 or Ext. 8579.
*News Bureau
Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis
355 Lansing Street Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
{ ARCH-791205)
.!\RCHI VES
UNIVERSITY LIBRARY 4 20 BLAKE STREET
Pan Am Events Planned Around the IU System
Faculty and administration of IU Campuses throughout Indiana are excited about the potential for teaching and learning opportunities since the announcement of the Tenth Pan American Games in Indianapolis. Since the announcement, groups have been meeting to determine what role the university might play.
The man who has been instrumental in orchestrating and coordinating much of that activity in Bloomington is Dennis Conway, director of the Center for Latin American and Caribbean Studies. Conway reports that, among other initiatives, there will be more courses on the Bloomington campus this fall which will focus on various aspects of Pan Americanism.
The Center will sponsor a film series with movies from contemporary Latin American cinema. This will be offered for both the campus and the community in the spring of 1987.
Dia logos, a biweekly lecture series, also will continue through the 1986-87 school year. Dia logos is a formal presentation by a faculty member or graduate student on research currently in progress. A question-and-answer session fol lows each presentation. The format varies for each Dia logo, depending on the subject matter and the desires of the presenter.
Conway hopes to have a coordinator soon to help maintain information on programs being developed on the Bloomington campus. The Center for Latin American and Caribbean
Studies wi 11 then become the source of information for that
TRINIDAD: A bell, age unknown, is thought to have been used to announce meals.
1986
campus. Conway is a permanent member of the Pan Am Steering Committee which meets biweekly at IUPUI.
Other Bloomington divisions are considering additions for the 1986-87 school year leading up to the games. William R.
Cagle, head of Lilly Library, has verified that a display on Pan Americanism will be in the lounge at Lilly Library June through August, 1987.
Members of the Pan American Advisory Committee for other campuses in the system are: William H. Klemme, assistant professor of Spanish at IU-Purdue at Fort Wayne;
Allen B. Maxwell, associate professor of political science at IU-Kokomo; Robert A. Lentz, director of community relations at IU-Southeast, and Roger P. Hamburg, chairman and professor of political science at IU-South Bend.
Host Considerations-Meals
Visitors from other countries often have different eating habits from those practiced in the United States. Latin Americans not only have a potpourri of foods, but the meal time schedule also varies.
The morning meal is called desayuno, served between 6 and 8 a.m. The traditional beverage with all meals is cafe con leche (coffee with milk), but especially in the morning.
The coffee is very stong and concentrated. Only about a fourth of a cup of coffee is mixed with scalded, foamy milk and sugar. One will rarely find people drinking a cup of black coffee as Americans do. However, people who like black coffee often will have a "pocillo de cafe" negro (demi-tasse).
El desayuno like all other meals varies among countries. In some one can be served any of the following for breakfast:
bread and butter, omelettes, sautee plantains with mortadella, onion and bread soup, tropical fruits and juices, soda crackers with cheese, hot cereal (wheat, corn, oats), or just ham and eggs.
El almuerzo is the main meal of the day and is eaten as late as 2 p.m. This meal normally includes soup, tortillas, rice or potatoes, meat, bread, beans, fruits and dessert. Latin Americans are accustomed to hot and heavy meals for the almuerzo. A cold sandwich or a salad are items for the merienda.
La merienda (the American coffee break) is taken either in the morning (medias nueve) or in the afternoon. It is a time to socialize with neighbors or co-workers. Snacks in Latin America can be tasty and filling like arepas (corn or flour biscuits), panela (brown sugar clusters), empanadillas (cheese, meat or fruit turnovers), bocadillos (sandwiches), fruits or just cafe.
La cena is the evening meal, somewhat lighter and rarely eaten before 8 p.m. In Peru, Chile and Nicaragua this is the main meal of the day and it could be eaten as late at 10 p.m.
Traditionally these have been the practices but as times change habits change. Working schedules, woman's role in society and economic realities make it difficult. Not all peoples in Latin American can enjoy the privilege of three or four meals a day and not everybody is favored by good nutrition. However, there is always a good spirit at el desayuno, el almuerzo y la cena. Buen provecho!
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IUPUI is an Equal Opportunity Affirmative Action EducationalInstitution
Games History Reaches Back to 1951
Nine previous Pan American Games competitions have been held.
There are 37 member countries of the Pan American Sports Organization (PASO-Organization Deportiva Panamericana (ODEPA)). Of the 37 countries only 12 (Argentina, Brazil, Cuba, Chile, El Salvador; Guatemala, Jamaica, Mexico, Panama, United States, Uruguay, and Venezuela) have sent athletes to all nine previous Games.
PASO was founded in 1950 by Olympic Committees established in the Americas, and is recognized by the International Olympic Committee. Its principal purpose is to conduct the Pan Am Games and to foster and develop amateur sports in America through its Olympic Committees.
PASO's aims are to: (1) Strenthen and tighten the bonds of friendship and solidarity among the people of America;
GAMES DATES CITY
I Feb 25-Mar 8, 1951 Buenos Aires
II Mar 12-Mar 26, 1955 Mexico City
Ill Aug 27-Sep 7, 1959 Chicago
IV Apr 20-May 5, 1963 Sao Paulo
v
Jul22-Aug7, 1967 WinnipegVI Jul 31-Aug 13, 1971 Cali
VII Oct 12-0ct 26, 1975 Mexico City
VIII Jul Hui 15, 1979 San Juan
IX Aug 14-Aug 28, 1983 Caracas
PARAGUAY: Unfinished church of Mission of Jesus stands as a tribute to the 3 ,000 Indians who worked on it for two years prior to the expulsion of the Jesuits in 1767.
(2) Further the development and growth of the Olympic ideal, in accordance with the rules of the International Olympic Committee; (3) Cooperate in America with international sports organizations in all matters under their jurisdiction, and assist them in the performance and coordination of their duties; and (4) Regulate and control the organization of the Pan American Sports Games, enforcing Olympic rules and principles.
The permanent headquarters of the Pan American Sports Organization is in Mexico City. Its flag was approved in 1954.
It is rectangular in shape, white in color; and twice as long as it is wide. In the center is an emblem bearing the motto: 'America, Espirito, Sport, Fraternite" together with a torch placed across five concentric rings in yellow, green, white, red, and blue- the five colors common to all flags of the Pan American countries.
"1987 Pan American Games Fact Sheet" by PAX/Indianapolis The previous games, locations, nations competing, number of sports, and number of athletes who competed:
NATIONS SPORTS ATHLETES
21 19 2,513
22 17 2,583
24 18 2,263
22 19 1, 165
29 19 2,361
32 17 2,935
33 19 3,146
34 22 3,700
36 25 3,800
PARAGUAY: Interiors and exteriors of mission churches decorated by Guarani Indians in stone and wood.