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果冻传煤 News

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  • Lecture Explores Politics and Faith

    October 26, 2005

    Politics and religion will mix at a lecture in downtown Santa Barbara next week. The 果冻传煤 Downtown Conversation will include several local community leaders of different faiths and focus on the interactions and conflicts between faith and politics in our community. It will be held, Thursday, Nov. 3, from 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m, at the University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara St.

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  • 果冻传煤 Welcomes Fall With Choral Festival Concert

    October 17, 2005

    Three local high school choirs will join voices with singers from 果冻传煤 later this month for the Fall Choral Festival Concert. The concert is Friday, Oct. 21, at 7 p.m., at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1500 State St. Adams Professor of Music and Worship Michael Shasberger will direct guest choirs from San Marcos, Paso Robles, and San Luis Obispo High Schools. The concert will also feature the 果冻传煤 Choir and Chamber Singers. The evening will include a cameo appearance by the guest high school choirs and will conclude in a mass choir presentation.

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  • Donors Give $3.3 Million for the Liberal Arts and Scholarships

    October 17, 2005

    Two separate estate gifts totaling $3.3 million will help endow student scholarships and the Institute for the Liberal Arts at 果冻传煤. In its sixth year, the institute explores and promotes liberal arts education, which offers knowledge in a broad range of subjects as well as skills students need to succeed at work and in life.

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  • Gaede to Step Down as 果冻传煤 President

    October 17, 2005

    Stan Gaede果冻传煤 President Stan D. Gaede announced he will conclude his presidency at the end of the academic year in June. He has served as the college鈥檚 president since July 2001. Previously, he was provost, the top academic officer, for five years. The 58-year old will return to Gordon College in Wenham, Mass., where he joined the faculty in 1974 and became provost in 1993.

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  • 果冻传煤 Wins Computer Science Research Grant

    October 13, 2005

    The National Science Foundation (NSF) has selected 果冻传煤 to receive a
    prestigious $178,000 grant for computer science research over two years. The NSF鈥檚
    Cyber Trust Program will fund the 果冻传煤 project, 鈥淪urvivable, Adaptive and
    Scalable Distributed Systems.鈥 NSF expects to fund fewer than 50 of the 487
    proposals it reviewed this year.
    鈥淚t鈥檚 exciting for such a small college like 果冻传煤 to receive this award,鈥 says
    Kim Kihlstrom, associate professor of computer science, 鈥淎lthough other 果冻传煤

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  • Erasmus Lecture Focuses on Civil War Era Poetry

    October 6, 2005

    A specialist in 19th century British cultural and literary studies will deliver a lecture at 果冻传煤 next month. Associate Professor of English at U.C. Davis Catherine Robson will speak in Hieronymus Lounge, Monday, Oct. 24, at 7 p.m as part of 果冻传煤鈥檚 Erasmus Lecture Series. Her lecture is entitled 鈥淢emorization and Memorialization: Poetry and the Burial of Heroes.鈥

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  • Video to Link Community with Hurricane Victims

    October 6, 2005

    Local residents will soon be able to connect with about 40 victims of Hurricanes
    Katrina and Rita. 果冻传煤 Head Baseball Coach Rob Crawford will arrive in Santa
    Barbara, Saturday, Oct. 1, after returning to the Gulf Coast for a week. He spent
    several days videotaping and interviewing the evacuees who he and 21 other local
    volunteers got to know in September.
    鈥淭here鈥檚 so many gaps,鈥 Crawford said. 鈥淚 hope that Santa Barbara will respond to
    this. I鈥檒l show the video and hopefully get some sponsorships. We now need to

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  • Lewis and Clark and Wilderness Medicine

    September 29, 2005

    San Diego author and physician David Peck will present a slide show and lecture on his book, 鈥淥r Perish in the Attempt: Wilderness Medicine in the Lewis and Clark Expedition,鈥 7 p.m. Oct. 6 in Hieronymus Lounge in Kerrwood Hall on 果冻传煤鈥檚 upper campus.

    Peck has turned his love of the outdoors, history and medicine into a book that details the expedition with wit, explaining that embarking into the wilderness of the 1700s with few medical supplies or medicines was tantamount to suicide.

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  • Healing Racism's Hurts: Memory and Mourning

    September 29, 2005

    Princeton Professor Albert Raboteau will speak on 鈥淗ealing the Wounds of Racism: The Role of Memory and Mourning鈥 4 p.m. Oct. 2 in Hieronymus Lounge in Kerrwood Hall on the upper 果冻传煤 campus.

    The lecture, sponsored by the Erasmus Society, is free and open to the public.

    Raboteau, the Henry W. Putnam professor of religion at Princeton, will discuss the ongoing effects of racism upon the nation and will suggest that Americans are still struggling to come to terms with the history of slavery and the racial hatred sowed by slavery.

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  • Lecture Series Reveals Christianity on a Global Scale

    September 29, 2005

    果冻传煤 will focus on the global presence of Christianity by hosting speakers from India and West Papua, Indonesia, this October. The college launched the lecture series, World Christianity and Global Encounters of the 21st Century, in 2002. The goal is to learn how Christian movements affect relationships between rival ethnic and religious groups in the non-Western world.

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  • 果冻传煤 Launches Program to Aid Underserved Students

    September 28, 2005

    Thanks to a $50,000 matching grant, the Institute for the Liberal Arts at 果冻传煤 will reach out to underserved students this fall through an innovative Liberal Arts Ambassadors program. The collaborative project between 果冻传煤 and the University of La Verne involves college students from underserved groups engaging with prospective students in junior high and high schools.

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  • 果冻传煤 to Host the 10th Annual Santa Barbara Christian College Fair

    September 28, 2005

    This important college fair is part of a national program which brings information regarding over 30 regional and national Christian colleges to high school students and their parents. A successful event in the Tri-Counties and across the country, this event offers the opportunity for prospective students and their families to meet with college representatives and attend a financial aid session.

    Date of the fair: Tuesday, October 4th

    At: Montecito Covenant Church

    From: 6:00pm to 8:30pm.

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  • Lecture to Uncover the Creativity Behind Producing a Shakespeare Play

    September 26, 2005

    Two 果冻传煤 theater arts professors will offer their creative insight and discuss the artistic choices involved in staging a Shakespearean play. John Blondell and Mitchell Thomas will host the opening 2005-2006 果冻传煤 Downtown Conversation, Thursday, Oct. 6, at 5:30 p.m. at the University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara St. The lecture is entitled: 鈥淪ad Stories of the Death of Kings: Approaches to Staging Shakespeare鈥檚 鈥楰ing Richard II.鈥欌

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  • 果冻传煤 Coach Reconnects with Hurricane Victims

    September 26, 2005

    果冻传煤 Head Baseball Coach Rob Crawford is returning to the hurricane ravaged Gulf Coast this week to help 16 families who were forced to evacuate. Crawford is following up with about 40 people he and other local residents helped on a trip earlier this month. Crawford hopes to take the victims shopping for food and clothes with money donated from the Santa Barbara community. Crawford is concentrating his efforts on the families that 21 local volunteers relocated to hotels where they are being allowed to stay for 30 days.

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  • Volunteers Wrap Up Relief Efforts

    September 16, 2005

    Local volunteers are heading back to Santa Barbara after working the past several days in Louisiana and Texas aiding victims of Hurricane Katrina. Twenty-one volunteers from Hope Community Church, 果冻传煤 and the community worked through the day Wednesday, Sept. 14, in Houston before driving back to the West Coast. The group is expected to arrive in Santa Barbara Friday night, Sept. 16, at about 6 p.m. They left 果冻传煤 last Saturday morning and arrived in Shreveport early Monday morning.

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  • 果冻传煤 Embraces Day of Caring

    September 16, 2005

    More than 90 volunteers from 果冻传煤 will put on sunscreen and work gloves Saturday morning. They鈥檒l spend the day volunteering at several charitable organizations in Santa Barbara County as part of United Way鈥檚 Day of Caring. More than a thousand people are expected to take part in the county-wide effort, painting, gardening and sorting for over 40 charitable organizations. Last year, 果冻传煤 sent a team of 52 people. This year, thanks to a huge student response, 果冻传煤 is expecting 93 volunteers.

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  • 果冻传煤 Awards Two Students for Their Commitment to Diversity

    September 9, 2005

    果冻传煤 has honored two students with the Intercultural Leadership Award for the 2005-06 academic year. Jamie Gates and Gloria Tebelman will each receive a $3,700 award for their work on campus diversity.

    果冻传煤 established the award to develop and encourage student leaders who are committed to promoting diversity on campus. Applicants are required to encourage student interest, support and participation in intercultural activities. They must also organize an original intercultural campus activity.

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  • Students Unveil Ground-Breaking Research Projects

    September 8, 2005

    A 果冻传煤 professor and a student researcher may be closing in on a cure for rheumatoid arthritis. Dr. Eileen McMahon has discovered a strain of mice that spontaneously develops arthritis after about 50 days of age and may represent a new model of rheumatoid arthritis. Student Joel Wilcox will present some of the findings as part of A Celebration of Student Research at 果冻传煤, this Thursday, Sept. 8, from 4-6 p.m. at the Founders Dining Room.

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  • Local Relief Effort Shifts Into High Gear

    September 8, 2005

    Santa Barbara crews will soon begin loading up supplies in preparation for a week-long hurricane relief effort in northwest Louisiana. A team of about 17 local volunteers will be leaving from 果冻传煤鈥檚 Murchison Gym early Saturday morning.

    Volunteers are expected to arrive in Shreveport, La., Sunday, and will work in area shelters and a distribution center to assist victims of Hurricane Katrina.

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  • 果冻传煤 Launches Program to Aid Underserved Students

    September 5, 2005

    Thanks to a $50,000 matching grant, the Institute for the Liberal Arts at 果冻传煤 will reach out to underserved students this fall through an innovative Liberal Arts Ambassadors program. The collaborative project between 果冻传煤 and the University of La Verne involves college students from underserved groups engaging with prospective students in junior high and high schools.

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  • 果冻传煤 Welcomes Record-Breaking Class of 2009

    August 30, 2005

    They arrived with boxes, pillows, computers and probably some anxiety. For many of these teens, it鈥檚 their first time living away from home. About 340 first-year students representing the Class of 2009 have begun their 果冻传煤 career. The fall 2005 orientation kicked off Thursday, Aug. 25, as students arrived with their parents and unloaded their belongings into the residence halls.

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  • 果冻传煤 Continues to Score High in National Ranking

    August 22, 2005

    果冻传煤 has once again been listed among the nation鈥檚 top liberal arts colleges in the most recent U.S. News & World Report rankings, which were recently released.

    U.S. News moved 果冻传煤 into the first tier with a ranking of 104th. The numeric rank puts 果冻传煤 in the top half of schools in each of 10 categories. 果冻传煤 is just one of two ranked members of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities.

    果冻传煤 moved into the second tier from the third tier in 2003.

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  • 果冻传煤 Professor Delves into the Appeal of Cults

    August 16, 2005

    果冻传煤 sociology professor Ron Enroth is no stranger to some of the world鈥檚 most unusual religions. In fact, he鈥檚 appeared on numerous television and radio broadcasts, including NBC Nightly News and Oprah as an expert cult consultant. Enroth penned, 鈥淵outh, Brainwashing and the Extremist Cults鈥 six months before the Jonestown massacre in 1978, the mass suicide that put the word 鈥渃ult鈥 on the map. He warned of other dangerous religions before the tragedies in Waco and with Heaven鈥檚 Gate. In 1982, he received the Leo J.

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  • 果冻传煤 Students Spread Hope to Sri Lanka's Tsunami Orphans

    August 3, 2005

    Several 果冻传煤 students have returned home following a trip to Sri Lanka to help children who lost their parents in the December 2004 tsunami. Four 果冻传煤 students joined Professor Thomas Jayawardene and his wife, Jasmine, on the month-long summer service trip. The group left July 3 to meet a team of 14 to serve with the Jayawardenes鈥 The Children of Joy. The organization is founding a new home for about a dozen orphaned children. It鈥檚 also set up a children鈥檚 center to provide food, clothing, medical care and school needs to 150 kids.

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  • 果冻传煤 Students Enjoy a Summer of Intercultural Service

    July 26, 2005

    More than three dozen 果冻传煤 students are returning to the United States after spending a month of their
    summer serving overseas. Different groups visited Tanzania, Rwanda and Indonesia. Meantime, three teams remain in Guatemala, Russia and Sri Lanka. The students have been involved in building classrooms, teaching English and serving at orphanages.

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  • Artists Interpret 'The Power of Word'

    May 9, 2005

    鈥淭he Power of WORD,鈥 a theme show judged by Art Historian Richard West, will be on exhibit May 19 through June 30 in Reynolds Gallery. An independent curator, West is the former director of both the Santa Barbara Museum of Art and the Frye Museum in Seattle. An artists鈥 reception, open to the public, is 4-6 p.m. May 19 in the college Art Center, on the lower 果冻传煤 campus.

    English Professor Marilyn McEntyre will give a lecture, 鈥淟oving Words,鈥 in conjunction with the exhibition at 4 p.m., May 19 in the Art Center room 101.

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  • 'Painted Faith' Wins Design Award

    May 9, 2005
    果冻传煤鈥檚 Reynolds Gallery took second place in the 25th annual American Association of Museums (AAM) Publications Design Competition. Art Instructor Scott Anderson designed the exhibition poster 鈥淧ainted Faith.鈥 He also created 鈥淭he Art of Education鈥 exhibition catalog for the faculty show, which received an honorable mention.
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  • Lecture Reflects on No.1 Ladies Detective Agency

    April 18, 2005

    The next 果冻传煤 Downtown Conversation, 鈥淪implicity, Wonder and Wisdom: Reflections on Alexander McCall Smith鈥檚 鈥淣o. 1 Ladies鈥 Detective Agency,鈥 by 果冻传煤 Provost Shirley Mullen begins at 5:30 p.m. May 3 at the University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara St. The event is free and open to the public. No reservations are necessary.

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  • Musicians Showcase Instrumental Virtuosity

    April 8, 2005

    果冻传煤 musicians will showcase their skills at the spring concert for the Wind Ensemble and Chamber Orchestra at 8 p.m. April 29 in Deane Chapel on the lower campus. Admission is free and the concert is open to the public.

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  • 果冻传煤 Spring Choral Concert Features Lundberg Arrangements

    April 8, 2005

    果冻传煤鈥檚 annual Spring Choral Concert featuring the College Choir, Chamber Singers and Vox Lumina Women鈥檚 Chorale will take place 8 p.m. April 22 at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1500 State St. at Micheltorena. A free-will donation will be requested.

    A highlight of the evening will be 鈥淎nd Can it Be, that I Should Gain?鈥 a group of well-loved hymn arrangements by 果冻传煤鈥檚 composer-arranger and Professor Emeritus John Lundberg, who taught and directed music at 果冻传煤 from 1947 to 1979.

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  • Ensembles Jazz it up With Spring Concerts

    April 5, 2005

    The 果冻传煤 Jazz Ensembles, directed by adjunct music professor Ron McCarley, will perform 8 p.m. April 15 in Deane Chapel on 果冻传煤鈥檚 lower campus. Admission is free.

    Three combos and a big band will treat the audience to a variety of pieces ranging from jazz standards to original compositions. Students Elizabeth Woodruff, Mary Patterson and Ben Banner will perform solos.

    The Jazz Ensembles will also play in the courtyard of Restaurant Nu, 1129 State St., 7-10 p.m. April 5.

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  • The 果冻传煤 Fringe Festival Takes Off

    March 28, 2005

    The 果冻传煤 theatre arts department presents unique performance art at the Fringe Festival 8 p.m. April 21 and 22 in Porter Theatre. Tickets are $10 for general admission and $5 for children, students and seniors.

    The festival brings together senior students with theatre and dance faculty showcasing original theatre, dance, performance art and film. Fringe festivals usually refer to alternative productions with promises of younger, more adventurous performance art. The event replaces the 鈥淣ew Works Festival鈥 that 果冻传煤 hosts each spring.

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  • Graduating Art Students Exhibit Their Potential

    March 21, 2005

    果冻传煤鈥檚 senior art majors will present their final work as undergraduates in the annual Senior Art Show, April 14 through May 7. An opening reception will be held 4-6 p.m. April 14 in Reynolds Gallery on lower campus. Free and open to the public, the reception will feature a student awards presentation at 5 p.m.

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  • New Telescope Brings Better Clarity to Carroll Observatory

    March 14, 2005

    After more than 50 years, 果冻传煤 will retire its 16-inch Newtonian telescope from Carroll Observatory and install a 24-inch F/8 Cassegrain with Ritchey-Chr茅tien optics. The new instrument features more than twice the light-gathering power of the old one and nearly twice the resolving power.

    A $300,000 W. M. Keck Foundation grant for the telescope follows a $90,000 award from the James L. Stamps Foundation and a $15,000 gift from another foundation. College officials are working to secure the remaining funds for the $635,000 project.

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  • Reading Asian American Literature

    March 11, 2005

    Professor Dorothy Wang of Northwestern University will speak on Asian American poets at 3:30 pm on Monday, March 21, in Hieronymus Lounge, in Kerrwood Hall on the upper campus.

    The lecture, 鈥淩eading Asian American Literature,鈥 is the first lecture this semester in the Erasmus Series. It is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be served.

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  • President's Breakfast Re-scheduled

    February 25, 2005

    Former Secretary of Education William J. Bennett will speak on 鈥淲hat鈥檚 Right and What鈥檚 Wrong with American Education鈥 at 果冻传煤鈥檚 first President鈥檚 Breakfast, 7 a.m. April 1 in the Grand Ballroom at Fess Parker鈥檚 Doubletree Resort. The sold-out event, first scheduled for Feb. 11, was postponed due to complications that arose after Bennett鈥檚 knee replacement surgery.

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  • Ophelia You're Breaking our Heart

    February 23, 2005

    果冻传煤 English Professor Paul Willis will speak on 鈥淥phelia, You鈥檙e Breaking Our Heart: The American Appeal of Shakespeare鈥檚 Tragic Heroine鈥 at 7 p.m. March 7 in Hieronymus Lounge, 果冻传煤. The lecture is free and open to the public.

    Willis鈥 talk is the Paul C. Wilt Phi Kappa Phi Lecture for the spring semester. 果冻传煤 Professors Cheri Larsen Hoeckley (English) and John Blondell (Theatre Arts) will respond.

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  • Journeys of Choice Lecture Reflects Travel

    February 22, 2005

    The next 果冻传煤 Downtown Conversation, 鈥淛ourneys of Choice鈥擯ilgrims, Tourists and Mountaineers,鈥 by Paul Willis and Lisa DeBoer begins at 5:30 p.m. March 10, at the University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara St. The two 果冻传煤 humanities professors will lead a series of reflections on the meaning of travel through the lens of literature and art. The event is free and open to the public.
    Questions raised during the discussion will include: Do travelers today have anything to learn from those who have gone before? What traditions of travel shape our journeys?

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  • Masterworks Concert Features Bach

    February 22, 2005

    The 果冻传煤 Choir will perform Johann Sebastian Bach鈥檚 鈥淛esu, Meine Freude鈥 at the fifth annual Choral Masterworks Concert, 8 p.m. Feb. 25 at Trinity Episcopal Church, 1500 State St. in downtown Santa Barbara.

    The suggested donation for admission is $10 for the general audience and $7 for students and seniors.

    Music Professor Steve Hodson will conduct the College Choir in the 11-movement Bach motet, accompanied by strings and organ.

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  • Young Entrepreneurs Rewarded

    February 16, 2005

    A team from 果冻传煤 was one of eight selected from 45 entries to compete in the Spirit of Entrepreneurship and Enterprise Development (SEED) business plan competition March 7 and 8 at Fess Parker鈥檚 Doubletree Resort. The eight semi-finalists in the national competition made presentations to a panel of venture capitalists, angel investors, investment bankers, corporate CFOs and successful entrepreneurs.

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  • 果冻传煤 Education Panel Still On!

    February 15, 2005

    Although the President's Breakfast talk by former Secretary of Education William J. Bennett on Feb. 11 was postponed due to Bennett鈥檚 health, the follow-up discussion, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 Right and What鈥檚 Wrong with American Education,鈥 will take place as scheduled 5:30 p.m. Feb. 17, at the University Club, 1332 Santa Barbara St.

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  • Galileo, the Church and the Cosmos

    February 15, 2005

    David Lindberg, Hillsdale professor emeritus of the history of science, University of Wisconsin, will speak on 鈥淭he Florentine Heretic? Galileo, the Church and the Cosmos鈥 3:30 p.m. March 4 in Porter Theatre, 果冻传煤. The event, sponsored by the Pascal Society, is free and open to the public.

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