Friday, October 27: Noon Trigon Meeting, MCC Suite Intramural Bowling and Billiards Deadline 4:00 p.m Fantasy Basketball Deadline 4:00 p.m 8:00 p.m Ten Little Indians , Studio Theatre The Studio Theatre’s presentation of Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians will begin on Friday, October 20, at 8:00 p.m. in the Studio Theatre. Tickets are on sale at the RUB Desk, at $3 for students and $5 for the general public. on October 20, 21, 24, 25, 26, and in October 22 and 28 at 2:30 p.m. This mystery-comedy is set on in island off the coast of Devon, England. Eight unsuspecting guests have been invited for a weekend retreat to the Owens home, though none of the guests have ever met their hosts. Nor have the guests ever met each other. Even more bizarre, the household .ervants have never met their em ployers. And so commences a hu morously baffling weekend that will soon turn bloody. The title for the play is derived Torn ten Indian statuettes that are . nuddled on a mantle in the house. Shortly after all the guests arrive, one of the statues falls from the mantle and breaks. Immediately afterward, one of the guests dies. And then there were nine. The remaining guests must decipher the clues left for them to determine who will be the next to fall, and why. Little by little they will fit the pieces together, but they may not be quick enough. Who will be the “one little Indian boy, left all alone?” Tickets for Ten Little Indians are $3 for students and $5 for the general public. To reserve your seat, please call the RUB Desk at 6242. LEB Band, Red Letter Day, Bruno’s 8:30 p.m LEB Movie, Gossip , Reed 117 10:00 p.m Saturday, October 28: 8:30 p.m LEB Comedian, Dean Edwards, Bruno’s 10:00 p.m LEB Movie, Gossip , Reed 117 Sunday, October 29: 2;30 p.m, Ten Little Indians, Studio Theatre 8:00 p.m. Catholic Mass, Reed Commons IQ<I ICQI j^f iu-i: ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼WfW- A Closer Look^"^ TEN LITTLE INDIANS 10:00 a.m. Women’s Volleyball Alumni Game, Erie Hall Women’s Volleyball Game, Erie Hall 10 p.m Ten Little Indians, Studio Theatre Calendar of Event Protestant Worship Services, Reed 114 8:00 p.m LEB Karaoke, Bruno’s 8:30 p.m LEB Movie, Gossip , Reed 117 9:00 p.m monday, October 30: Intramural Billards begins “Feed The Need” Food Drive begins Lambda Sigma is again sponsoring the Feed the Need Food Drive on cam pus, benefitting the Second Harvest Food Bank. The Drive will begin on Monday, October 30, and will continue throueh day, November 13. Behrend clubs andoi will set up donation boxes in many of ings throughout campus. Students, facu! staff are encouraged to bring in dry foot nations. The boxes will be collected 01 the 13 th. Also, organizations will be involved ii a Break Out Day on Saturday, Novembei Members will be canvassing the neighborhood, going door-to-door asking for donations. For more information, contact Nick Pflugh, president of Lambda Sigma, at nrpl23@psu.edu. Noon Women Today Meeting, MCC Suite Tuesday, October 31: Halloween! Men’s Soccer Game, Playing Fields 3:00 p.m Behrend Jazz Band Concert, Bruno’s V J * 8:00 p.m Wednesday, nouember 1: 11:00 a.m. Commuter Council, “Winterize Your Car Seminar,” Bruno’s Patio (Outside) 1:00 p.m Commuter Council Meeting, Reed 112 5:00 p.m Psychology Coalition Brain Banquet, Lawrence Hall Psychology Lab 5:15 p.m. SGA Meeting, Reed 114 Congressman Phil English Lecture, “Speaking up for Education,” Reed Commons 7:00 p.m SPEAKING UP FOR EDUCATION On Wednesday, November 1, Republican United States Representative Phil English, who is running for re- election this year, will be at Penn State Behrend. His lecture, “Speaking up for Education,” is being sponsored by Delta Sigma Pi. It will begin at 7:00 p.m. in the Reed Commons. —English will speak on his plans to increase the maximum Hi Pell Grant and the three bill edu cation package to expand Education Savings Accounts. 7:30 p.m. College Republicans Meeting, call Erin McCurdy at 897-0417 for location A Closer Look^~^ FEED THE NEED A Closer Look^"^ ALL BEHREND ORGANIZATIONS AND ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES ARE INVITED TO ADVERTISE THEIR EVENTS OR NOTICES ON THE BEACON'S " CALENDAR OF EVENTS PAGE. TO GET THE WORD OUT, us your notices, . ISSUING TIMES, AND EVENTS. -HAVE INFORMATION TO THE BEACON BY TUESDAY AT 12:00 P.M. ; . FOR THAT WEEK'S PUBLICATION. SEND all submissions to behrcoll3@aol.com. mark Vour Calendars POET LINDA HOGAN COMMENCES NEW SPEAKER SERIES Poet, novelist, and essayist Linda Hogan will be the first speaker of the newly created Diversity Through Poetry Series at Penn State Erie, The Behrend College. Hogan will present "Solar Storms” on Monday, November 6, at 7:00 p.m. in the Reed Union Building Commons. This event is free and open to the public. Hogan, a Chickasaw poet and professor at the University of Colorado, has taught writing workshops at various universities and Indian and rural communities. Some of her most notable commendations include a National Endowment for the Arts grant, a Guggenheim fellowship, a Minnesota Arts Board Grant, and a Colorado Writers fellowship. “Linda Hogan has wrapped wonder and magic around some brutal American truths. Neither magic nor truth is diminished by the association,” wrote Los Angeles Times writer Barbara Kingsolver of Hogan’s 1990 novel, Mean Spirit. The novel was one of three finalists for a Pulitzer Prize in 1991. Solar Storms is a more recent novel by Hogan, written in 1995. It is the story of a young Native American woman in the 1970 s who, while searching for her mother, finds herself caught between the worlds of her birth and of her ancestry. Other works by Hogan include Seeing Through the Sun , The Book of Medicines, and a collection of sixteen essays titled Dwellings: Reflections on the Natural World. SKILLS YOU NEED TO SUCCEED The Fall Leadership Conference will be held on November 11-12 at Peek N’ Peak. The theme for this year’s conference is “Skills You Need to Suc- ceed.” This year the conference will be run differently than in the past. Those organizing the conference are looking for students to demonstrate their lead ership skills by presenting a topic at one of the group sessions. Those inter ested should contact the Office of Student Activities. Also, there is still room for students who simply want to attend. There is a $lO registration fee. Again, contact the Office of Student Activities for more information at 6171. Thursday, nouember 2: 6:00 p.m. College Democrats Meeting, Academic 55 7:15 p.m. LEB Meeting 7:30 p.m. IVCF Meeting, Science 126 7:30 p.m. —Astronomy Open House Night, Light and Color, Science 101 Dr. Jonathan Hall, instructor of physics, will lecture on “Light and Color” on Thursday, November 2, at 7:30 p.m. His presentation, part of the Open House Night in Astronomy Series, will take place in Science 101. The lecture is free and intended for a non-technical audience. Why do newborn babies have blue eyes? Why do most stars appear color less to our eyes, but are vibrantly colorful in photographs? Why do leaves turn colors in the fall? These questions and many more will be addressed by Hall in his presentation. He will explain how colors exist in nature and how the human eye per ceives color. Knowledge of these processes is used in many professions and applications; artists, decorators, printers, and web page designers all make use of this knowledge on a daily basis. Weather permitting, there will be astronomical observing following the lec ture. For more information, contact the School of Science at 6105. 9:00 p.m. LEB Movie, Road Trip , Reed 117 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 27, 2000 A Closer Look^^ LIGHT AND COLOR 1 if lii-HR \\ > m. u
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers