This past weekend, the Division of Student Affairs honored 74 Marquette students who have made outstanding contributions to the university or Milwaukee community by implementing programs and services through Student Affairs, Campus Ministry or student organizations. Students were recognized for contributions in celebration and promotion of diversity, community service, peer education, recreation, health and wellness, social and arts programming, spiritual development and justice education, and student governance and organizational leadership.
Six students were recognized with awards to honor exceptional contributions across several areas:
For a complete list of award recipients, visit the Division of Student Affairs website.
On Wednesday, April 24, the university will once again recognize Denim Day, an annual international effort to support sexual violence survivors and create a global change in attitudes towards sexual assault.
Denim Day began as a protest against a 1997 Italian court case, in which a convicted rapist's sentence was overturned. The court ruled that because the teenage victim's jeans were tight, the victim must have assisted in their removal, thereby making the sex act consensual. Enraged by the verdict, the women in the Italian Parliament launched into immediate action and protested by wearing jeans to work.
Denim Day 2013 will feature a clothing drive to benefit Pathfinders Milwaukee, an agency providing shelter and safety for homeless youth. Donation boxes will be placed in each of the residence halls, the Gender and Sexuality Resource Center and Student Health Service beginning on Monday, April 15. Arrangements can also be made to retrieve donated items from any campus location.
For more information or to request a Denim Day participation packet, contact Sue Cooper, coordinator of sexual violence and advocacy services, at 8-5244.
Earth Week will be celebrated on campus April 22-26. Join Students for an Environmentally Active Campus in celebrating the following events:
Monday, April 22: Earth Day
Tuesday, April 23: Energy Sustainability
Wednesday, April 24: Water Sustainability
Thursday, April 25: Public Health
Friday, April 26: Arbor Day
Additional information about Earth Week events can be found online.
All seniors graduating in May received an email from President Scott R. Pilarz, S.J., about completing the 2013 Graduating Senior Survey. Those receiving an invitation to participate are asked to please take the time to complete this important survey. Feedback will help the university improve the college experience for future students. In appreciation for participating, one in 20 students who complete the survey by Friday, April 26, will receive a $10 Jimmy John's gift card, and two graduating seniors will win a Senior Week ticket package, a $70 value. Students will be able to access the survey through a link in the email.
For additional information can be found online or by contacting Dr. Jon Dooley, senior associate dean of student development, at 8-7205.
The Women's and Gender Studies Program, the Department of History and the Associate Provost for Diversity and Inclusion will sponsor "The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks," Thursday, April 25, from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the Raynor Memorial Libraries' Beaumier Suites B and C. Dr. Jeanne Theoharis, professor of political science at Brooklyn College, will deliver the lecture. This lecture is part of the university's year-long celebration of The Freedom Project.
Marquette University Student Government and MU Mania are seeking student sketches for a "paint by numbers" concept mural that will be painted by students in the first week of classes for the fall semester. It will be called the MUmontage and will represent the community atmosphere that is Marquette. Drawings should depict the themes, "What makes Marquette a community to you?" and "How are we united as one student body?"
Artwork is due Tuesday, April 26, and can be dropped off at the MUSG office or emailed to MUSG.Programs@marquette.edu. A campus-wide vote for the top design will then take place. The winning sketch will then be placed on a giant canvas for the student body to fill in by painting by numbers the first week of the fall 2013 semester, and the final product will be revealed at the first After Dark hosted by MUSG Program Board next fall.
Raynor Memorial Libraries will hold a series of events in honor of Dorothy Day, the devout Catholic social activist, and in commemoration of the 80th anniversary of the Catholic Worker Movement, which quickly emerged following the publication of the first issue of the Catholic Worker newspaper on May 1, 1933.
A complete description of events can be found online.
Family and Alumni/ae of Marquette English will host the fourth annual Shakespeare birthday celebration, Shakespeare Sings!, Thursday, April 25, at 4:30 p.m. in the Weasler Auditorium. Russ McDonald, reviewer for Opera magazine, Shakespeare scholar and professor of English at Goldsmith's College at the University of London, will deliver a lecture, "Shakespeare Goes to the Opera." Shakespearean operas will also be performed.
To register for this free event, contact Jacqueline Rammer, teaching assistant for English, or the Department of English at 8-7179.
The Dispute Resolution Association will present "Negotiation: Compete or Problem-solve," Tuesday, April 23, from noon to 1 p.m. in the AMU, 252.
The workshop will attempt to answer a simple question with a not-so-simple answer: in negotiations, when should individuals "compete" and when should they "problem-solve?" Based on Gain the Edge! by Martin Latz, the workshop is designed to combine theory with practice. Participants are invited to come and learn about the theory in an interactive presentation-workshop format designed to help participants leave knowing how to put that theory into use.
Register by emailing David Angel, president of Marquette's Dispute Resolution Association.
The Counselor Education and Counseling Psychology Graduate Student Organization will host its annual Diversity Gala Saturday, May 4, from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the AMU, Monaghan Ballrooms. This annual event celebrates the CECP Diversity Scholarship that is awarded to an incoming or current CECP graduate student that identifies an ethnic or racial minority. The event will feature a keynote address by Ron Kuramoto, director of Future Milwaukee, as well as a silent auction.
Register by Friday, April 26, by contacting Meghan McDonough.
Members of ENGL 3210, Advanced Composition: Ethnography of the University, will host a research poster fair Thursday, April 25, from 11:15 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. in Raynor Memorial Libraries' Conference Center. Fourteen students will present their undergraduate research of university life at Marquette and their proposals for change.
Light refreshments will be served. For additional information, contact Dr. Beth Godbee, assistant professor of English, at 8-3468.
Sigma Tau Delta, the English Honor Society, will hold its annual induction and graduation ceremony Friday, April 26, from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in Raynor Memorial Libraries' Conference Center. The society will welcome new members, recognize graduating seniors and celebrate the accomplishments of the chapter.
Light food and drinks will be served. For additional information, contact Dr. Beth Godbee, assistant professor of English, at 8-3468.
The university chorus and symphony orchestra will join together to perform Mass in C Minor, KV 427, by Wolfgange Amadeus Mozart Saturday, April 27, at 8 p.m. in the Church of the Gesu. Admission is free.
The Haggerty Museum of Art at Marquette University is participating in the fifth annual Slow Art Day Saturday, April 27. Slow Art Day, an event that encourages visitors to slow down and spend time truly seeing a work of art, supports the Haggerty's mission of providing transformational learning opportunities through its exhibitions and programs. This event will feature the site-specific installation Mauka, Makai by Milwaukee photographer Kevin J. Miyazaki. Mauka, Makai comprises of portraits and views of Lake Michigan from Perimeter, a project commissioned by the Haggerty. Events held throughout the day include:
Admission is free; registration can be completed online. For additional information, contact the Haggerty Museum of Art at 8-7290.
The Department of Philosophy will host an ethics and political philosophy workshop, "The Problem of Impiety," Thursday, April 25, at 4 p.m. in the Raynor Memorial Libraries, Conference Center A. Cora Diamond, professor emerita at the University of Virginia, will lead the workshop. Her specialties include Wittgenstein, Frege, philosophy of language, moral and political philosophy, and the philosophy of literature. For additional information, contact Dr. Theresa Tobin, associate professor of philosophy, at 8-1414 or the Department of Philosophy.
Diamond will also present "Murdoch Off the Map, or Taking Empiricism Back From the Empiricists," as part of the Department of Philosophy Colloquium Series Friday, April 26, at 3:30 p.m. in Lalumiere, 172. For additional information, contact Beth O'Sullivan, assistant to the chair of philosophy, at 8-6858, or the Department of Philosophy.
The Department of Social and Cultural Sciences Colloquia Series will host its last installment, "Friendship, Fiction and the Dream of Disloyalty: White Women Telling Tales of Racial Justice Collaboration," Friday, April 26, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Lalumiere, 272. Dr. Susannah Bartlow, director of the Gender and Sexuality Resource Center, will examine how white women have centralized their own participation in civil rights and racial justice work and characterized their roles as benevolent, transgressive and transformative. However, the narratives and experiences of women of color belie this fantasy. From reading The Help through a critical race and queer feminist lens, Bartlow's paper outlines the parameters of a project on interracial collaborations in pursuit of racial justice.
The Department of Chemistry Spring 2013 Colloquium Series will host, "Scanning Electrochemical Microscopy - In Situ Interrogation of Surfaces," Friday, April 26, at 4 p.m. in Wehr Chemistry, 121. Dr. Allen J. Bard of the University of Texas at Austin Department of Chemistry will lead the seminar.
Refreshments will be served prior to the seminar at 3:45 p.m. in Wehr Chemistry, 121. For more information, contact the Department of Chemistry at 8-3515. A complete schedule of the Spring 2013 Colloquium Series can be found online.
The Department of Mathematics, Statistics and Computer Science Colloquium Series will host "Hybrid Data Assimilation Method," Friday, April 26, at 1 p.m. in Cudahy, 401. Dr. Haiyan Cheng of the Department of Computer Science at Willamette University will deliver the lecture.
Pre-colloquium refreshments will be served at 12:30 p.m. in Cudahy, 342. For additional information or questions, contact Dr. Rong Ge, assistant professor of mathematics, statistics and computer science, at 8-6344.
Dr. Helen Salz, professor of genetics and genome sciences at Case Western Reserve University, will speak Friday, April 26, at noon in Wehr Life Sciences, 111. Salz will deliver "Sex, Stem Cells and Tumors in the Drosophila Ovary."
Rev. Thomas Anderson, S.J., assistant director of Campus Ministry and Law School Chaplain, will celebrate Mass in the Marquette University Law School Chapel on the fourth floor of Eckstein Hall Wednesday, April 24, from 12:15 p.m. to 12:45 p.m. All members of the Marquette community are welcome to attend.