Café NFA offering final meals at Java City
The dietetics and hospitality students of the quantity foods class will host a Mexican-style meal April 22 in NFA 232 (Java City). The meal features tortilla soup, chicken fajitas with sautéed peppers and onions, Spanish rice, and pinto beans. The meal also includes raspberry chocolate mousse parfait. The meal costs $7.25, tax included. To reserve a seat, call 688-5656.
The last dining experience for the year at Café NFA is April 24. The menu features a chilled romaine garden salad, honey mustard glazed ham, scalloped potatoes, roasted root vegetables with walnut pesto sauce, wheat bun, and New York cheese cake for dessert. The cost is $7.75, tax included. For reservations call 688-5656. Serving time is from 11:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in NFA 232 (Java City).
Forestry, landscape guidance shapes Woodbine Cottage
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| Students in John Ball's arborculture class not only gained firsthand experience determining viable trees for the soil and weather conditions of Woodbine Cottage, they also received one-time experience felling trees. Ball said the large tree cut April 9 was 98 years old and probably planted about 1920. |
The landscape of Woodbine Cottage is changing and faculty experts and horticulture, forestry and landscape students are involved.
Most of the plants we've removed were planted by birds or squirrels about 10 years ago, according to John Ball, professor of forestry who has assessed and supervised the maintenance of trees on the 126-year-old campus and across the entire region for the past 15 years.
The large hackberry and ash trees we're removing are more than 90 years old, have decayed and won't be replaced, said Ball. Their removal will make a vast improvement for the gardens because the trees have made it difficult for plants to grow in the intense shade of the area.
Ball?s aboraculture students are removing overgrowth and decay in the 80-foot by 140-foot garden area. In addition, students in Matt James landscape architecture class are contributing to an overall design for the gardens.
The project makes use of the plant and landscape resources developed and found on campus.
Among the new things we will plant will be representatives of all the plants developed at SDSU, said Marcia Chicoine, wife of President David L. Chicoine.
The project is expected to take several years to complete. When finished, the gardens, bordered on the west and south by an experimental rammed earth wall constructed in 1934 and listed on the National Historic Register, will provide a showcase of university plant and forestry research and design.
Workshop deals with stupid things people do to ruin farms
West Branch, Iowa, farm woman and professional speaker Jolene Brown will present a workshop April 24 on "The 10 Stupid Things People Do To Ruin Family Farms."
"Anyone who has heard her speak says she is just amazing," reported Holly Marshall, president of the Ag Prexy Council at SDSU, which is bringing Brown to campus.
The 7:30 p.m. workshop in Rotunda D is free and no advanced registration is required. At 6 p.m., also in Rotunda D, Brown's topic is "It's a Jungle Out There" speaking about students in the global workplace.
Brown provides a mix between good entertainment and good information. She describes herself as a 5-foot, 12-inch funster who is long-legged but not long-winded, and as a prolific gardener, she warns people to "keep your doors locked during zucchini season."
For more information, contact Holly Marshall, 280-7724.
SDSU Employee Alma Mater Day this week
SDSU's Employee Alma Mater Day will be held April 25.
A reception honoring employee alums is at the Tompkins Alumni Center from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. The same discounts at area businesses will be valid on April 25 for people wearing their "Proud Alum" button.
For questions and to RSVP, contact the Alumni Association, 697-5198.
Military Appreciation Day on campus green
SDSU Air Force and Army ROTC cadets will host Military Appreciation Day Friday, April 25, at 1 p.m. on the campus green east of the South Dakota Art Museum.
President David L. Chicoine will speak at the event.
The cadets will be in review and awards will be presented.
All active and retired military members and their families are encouraged to attend. For more information, contact Amy Neeves at 605-201-0894.
SDSU prepares to host 34th annual Physics Bowl
Physics Bowl XXXIV, in conjunction with Engineering Expo, will be held April 25 in the Volstorff Ballroom from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
The popular contest draws students from across the region. Participating schools include teams from Arlington, Brandon Valley, Dell Rapids, Lennox, Miller, Parker, Sioux Falls Lincoln and O'Gorman, Webster, and Plattsmouth, Neb.
Throughout the competition, students will be asked questions based on topics like heat and thermodynamics, basic electricity, optics, and famous physicists.
For more information, contact Sally Krueger, 688-5428.
Governor's Art Exhibition begins at the Art Museum
South Dakota Art Museum will celebrate the diversity, creativity and excellence of South Dakota artists in "Endless Imagination: The South Dakota Governor's Third Biennial Art Exhibition." The traveling exhibition goes on display at the museum April 22 and runs through July 13. The show and accompanying events are sponsored in part by the South Dakota Art Council.
More than 140 entries were submitted and 54 were selected for the exhibition. Judging is based on creativity, technical capacity and presentation.
Artists and styles from across the state are represented. The coveted Juror?s Choice Award went to Martin John Garhart of Lead for his oil painting titled "Of What the Calling."
Honorable mention winners included Vi Colombe of Mission, Nick Fisher of Aberdeen, Scott Parsons of Sioux Falls, Tim Steele of Brookings, Lynn Thorpe of Belle Fourche, and Joshua Watts of Vermillion.
"We tried to balance media, styles and diversity of artistic vision," said John Ryktarik, juror and South Dakota Art Museum curator of Exhibits and one of three jurors.
After its time at the Art Museum, the exhibition will travel to the Dakotah Prairie Museum in Aberdeen, the University of South Dakota Galleries in Vermillion and the South Dakota Cultural Heritage Center in Pierre.
Art Museum to host reception to honor artists
Exhibiting artists will be honored April 25 at the South Dakota Art Museum during a reception featuring their work from 4:30 to 7 p.m.
Artists Joy Crane and Fatih Benzer will talk about their work at 5:30 p.m.
Known for creating distinctive pieces, Crane recently changed her medium to larger "beaded-beads" in 2004, distancing her work from the notion that beadwork is solely for delicate jewelry.
Also featured are SDSU Professor Fatih Benzer?s oil paintings and pastels. They are figurative in design, inspired by ancient mythologies, Eastern miniatures, architecture and whirling dervishes.
A collection of printmaker Andrew Kosten's works is also on exhibition. Kosten is currently an instructor of drawing and design at the College of the Sequoias in Visalia, Calif.
Co-sponsored by the South Dakota Council on World Affairs, the reception is free and open to the public. Valet parking is provided by Delta Chi Fraternity. For more information, call 688.5423.
Students to walk for cancer victims at Sexauer Field
Colleges against Cancer presents the annual Relay for Life April 25 at SDSU?s Sexauer Field.
Teams of up to 15 people will participate in a 12-hour walk around the track, beginning at 6 p.m. and concluding at 6 a.m. the following morning.
Food and entertainment will be part of the evening?s events. Meals will be available for a free-will donation. Other highlights include a DJ, talent show and karaoke.
The event has more than 40 teams signed up to raise awareness, participate and help raise funds through donations and sponsorships. All proceeds will go to the American Cancer Society. In case of inclement weather, the event will be moved to Frost Arena.
For more information, go to http://events.cancer.org/rflsdsu or contact Alissa Miles, 350-5387.
Spring Festival features talent of SDSU musicians
The Music Department will host the annual ?Spring Festival of Music? April 25-28 at the Performing Arts Center.
The festival includes five concerts, featuring most of the large ensembles within the department. The series opens April 25 at 7:30 p.m. with the Civic Symphony, followed by the Concert Band and Percussion Ensemble April 27 at 2:30 p.m.
The Jazz Ensembles will perform April 28 at 2:30 p.m. At 7:30 p.m., the Concert Choir and the SDSU Statesmen will be in a combined concert with the University Women?s Choir. The Symphonic and CommUniversity Band will perform April 28 at 7:30 p.m.
Tickets are $8 for adults, $5 for senior citizens, and $3 for students. One ticket admits the holder to all five concerts. All proceeds from the Spring Festival of Music will benefit the Music Department and its programs.
Advance tickets are available in the Music Department or at the Performing Arts Center Box Office one hour before each performance.
For more information, contact the Music Department, 688-5187.
Gardening TV program returns for 26th season
?Garden Line? begins its 26th season April 29, with a panel of experts to answer lawn and garden questions.
The live show with its call-in format airs Tuesdays from 7 to 8 p.m. (CT) on South Dakota Public Broadcasting-Television. This season features 20 episodes. The final episode is Sept. 30.
Specialists from SDSU?s Cooperative Extension Service answer horticulture questions about lawns, gardens, flowers and houseplants. Call 688-7378 during the program to get your questions to the panel of experts.
?Garden Line? panelists for 2008 are host Tom Bare, who founded the program; Dave Graper, a horticulture specialist and head of the Department of Horticulture, Forestry, Landscape, and Parks; Extension Entomologist Mike Catangui; Extension Weeds Specialist Mike Moechnig; and Extension Plant Pathologist Larry Osborne. Other contributors include Extension State Climatologist Dennis Todey, and Kent Jensen, associate professor in the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences.
Questions can be submitted to the show through the ?Garden Line? Web site http://gardenline.sdstate.edu.
Final Tech Transfer Workshop April 30
Department heads, faculty, active investigators and graduate students are urged to attend the last Tech Transfer Workshop Series at The Union in room 153 from 3-5 p.m. on April 30. Much of the subject matter of the workshops will be the domain expertise of the tech transfer professional.
For more information on the workshops, contact Bob Otterson, 688-4165, Robert.Otterson@sdstate.edu ; or Kevin Kephart, 688-4181, Kevin.Kephart@sdstate.edu.
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