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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 2, 2007 12:36:07 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Development Orientation Session

Reply-To: DDDH Send



TO: Deans, Directors and Department Heads



FROM: Penny Hunt, Vice Chancellor for Development





As we prepare for the public launch of the University-wide campaign, the Office of

Development is engaged in a number of campaign readiness projects. One of

these is the ongoing program to provide development training for interested

members of the campus community. This program already includes regular

training for Deans; this year we are expanding the training program to include

development orientation for directors and department heads.



This orientation session will help you explore how you can work with Development

to secure private philanthropy for your area or program, even if you do not have a

dedicated development officer. The session will include information on the

overall development efforts at UIC and how you can integrate into them, how to

build your constituency, and how to work with potential donors.



The session will be offered twice each year. The first will be Monday, January

29, 2007 from 10 to 11:30 am in SSB Room A. It is imperative that you sign up in

advance, so that can ensure adequate room space and handout materials.

RSVPs should be directed to Ray Vas at rvas@uic.edu and should be received by

Wednesday, January 24.



We look forward to seeing you at this session, and to UIC's continued success in

private fundraising.



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 2, 2007 1:41:41 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Leadership Changes in the Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research

Reply-To: DDDH Send



TO: Deans, Directors, and Departments Heads



FROM: Eric A. Gislason, Vice Chancellor for Research



RE: Leadership Changes in the Office of the Vice Chancellor for

Research



I am pleased to announce the promotion of two key staff members in the Office of the

Vice Chancellor for Research (OVCR).



Mary B. Bowman, PhD, was promoted to Director of the newly formed Office of Animal

Care and Institutional Biosafety (OACIB). Previously, Mary served as the Associate

Director of the Office for the Protection of Research Subjects with responsibility for

animal care and institutional biosafety.



In her role as Director of the OACIB, Mary provides regulatory oversight, education, and

guidance on the use of animals, recombinant DNA, and infectious agents. In addition

to assisting research investigators in complying with governmental and university

policies regarding the use of animals in research, testing or teaching, and in research

that involves the use of recombinant DNA and infectious agents, the OACIB, under

Mary's direction, provides administrative support to both the UIC Animal Care

Committee (ACC) and the Institutional Biosafety Committee (IBC).



William Hendrickson, PhD, was hired as the Director of the Research Resources Center

(RRC) effective September 16, 2006. Since 2004, Bill has served as Interim Director,

Research Resources Center-West with responsibility for the acquisition, maintenance

and support of high technology scientific research equipment for biomedical and

science research activities at UIC.



As Director of the consolidated RRC East and West, Bill will continue to support UIC's

biomedical and science research services and research and teaching departments with

the acquisition, maintenance and support of high technology scientific research

equipment. Bill also serves as Co-Director of the Graduate Education in Medical

Sciences (GEMS) program that offers students integrated training in the biomedical

sciences and is an Associate Professor in the College of Medicine.





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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 10, 2007 3:11:04 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: UIAA Student Leadership Award and Activities Honorary Society – Deadline

Extended

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Recognizing student leaders at UIC…



Nominations are due Wednesday, January 17 for the 2007 Student Leadership Award

and the 2007 Activities Honorary Society! The University of Illinois Alumni Association

(UIAA) is proud to offer two prestigious awards recognizing student leaders for their

exceptional contributions at UIC.



The 2007 Student Leadership Award is given to graduating students (undergraduate,

graduate or professional) who have demonstrated exceptional leadership through their

involvement in diverse campus student organizations. Nominees for the award should

have received their degrees in summer or fall 2006, or who are candidates for

graduation in May 2007. Recipients of the award will be honored at the UIAA

Leadership Awards Dinner on Thursday, March 15, 2007.



The 2007 Activities Honorary Society recognizes students whose participation in a

variety of activities on campus has contributed to a better community for everyone.

Eligible nominees must be associated with at least three relatively diverse student

organizations or volunteer activities with a key leadership role in one of the three, and

be in good academic standing with at least 72 credit hours completed by the end of the

2006 Spring Semester. Graduate and professional students are also

eligible. Inductees will be honored at a private ceremony sponsored by the UIAA on

Sunday, April 15, 2007.



To nominate a student, visit www.uiaa.org/chicago/awards, and click on either the

Student Leadership Award or Activities Honorary Society. If you have any questions,

please contact Alicia Sedberry, Assistant Director, Programs and Services, at

asedbe1@uic.edu or 312/996-8535.



University of Illinois Alumni Association

Building Relationships For Life

www.uiaa.org



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 10, 2007 3:14:58 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Alumni Career Center job posting

Reply-To: DDDH Send



University of Illinois Alumni Association

Assistant Director of Employer Relations



The University of Illinois Alumni Association is seeking an Assistant Director of

Employer Relations for its award-winning Alumni Career Center, located in downtown

Chicago. The position reports to the vice president of the Alumni Career Center.



Primary responsibilities are to coordinate employer relations activities and provide

individual career advising and workshop facilitation.



Qualifications: Masters degree in human resources, continuing education, counseling or

related field; minimum of 2 years work experience in a career services or human

resource/recruiting environment; knowledge of career-related technology programs and

proficiency in technology in general; demonstrated ability to provide individual career

advising, plan and conduct workshops and presentations, work with diverse alumni,

employers, faculty, and administrators; excellent communication skills and strong

service and collaborative orientation.



Salary range $35,000 to $43,000, commensurate with experience. A job description is

available at www.uiaa.org. For full consideration, send cover letter, resume and names

and addresses of at least three references by January 29, 2007, to the following

address:





University of Illinois Alumni Association

Alumni Career Center Search Committee

Attention: Julie Hays Bartimus

200 S. Wacker Drive, M/C 200

Chicago, IL 60606





The University of Illinois is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 11, 2007 3:49:47 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: FranklinCovey’ s Workshops

Reply-To: DDDH Send



UIC's Human Resources Development and University Human Resources Staff

Development Offices are jointly offering two of FranklinCovey's best-selling workshops.



FOCUS: Time Management Seminar workshop is ideal for individuals at all stages of

life, this NEW workshop is particularly helpful if you've recently started a new job,

entered a new phase of life, or embarked on the pursuit of a lifelong dream.



The Four Disciplines of Execution helps managers and teams identify their highest

priorities by separating the merely important from the wildly important. Each discipline

taught in the course helps teams stay aligned to the true purpose of the organization.



Enrollment is limited for each of these programs. FOCUS: Time Management has a

limited time reduced price of $120 (reg. price $299). The Four Disciplines of Execution

has a reduced price of $100 per participant.



More information about the workshop and registration can be found on the UIC HRD

website at:

http://www.uic.edu/depts/hr/develop/training/FranklinCovey%20Ad%20FOCUS.htm



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From: DDDH send

Date: January 16, 2007 11:27:23 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Reaccreditation

Reply-To: DDDH send



Dear Colleagues,



UIC's Reaccreditation Steering Committee is finalizing the campus's

self-study report, a critically important component of the North Central

Association's April 2007 reaccreditation review of UIC.



In the days and weeks ahead, committee members or their designees may be

contacting you with requests for information or for other assistance in

connection with the self-study. On behalf of the campus, thanks in advance

to you and your staffs for your complete and expeditious support.



Yours,



Sylvia Manning

Chancellor



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 16, 2007 3:59:36 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: New Director of Grants and Contracts

Reply-To: DDDH Send





Please join me in welcoming Vanessa Peoples as our new Director of Grants and

Contracts. Vanessa comes to us from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota where

she had overall responsibility for post award administrative and financial activities

totaling approximately $300 million as Head of Research Accounting. She

subsequently held two other financial and systems positions at Mayo. As head of

research accounting, she reengineered the Mayo Clinic's effort reporting activities to

come into compliance with federal regulations and implemented numerous policy and

procedural improvements, skills that will be useful to her at UIC. Her prior experience

at G. D Searle Pharmaceutical Company and the University of Chicago Hospitals

should serve us well as we increase the number of grants and contracts in translational

research and clinical trials. Vanessa has a MBA from the University of Chicago and is

a certified public accountant.



As you know, the Grants and Contracts Office has been undergoing a major

reorganization involving the addition of staff and retooling of existing staff. Vanessa's

skills in organizational development, strategic planning and process improvement

should help speed the reorganization along and improve overall service to the

University community. At UIC, Vanessa will oversee a full-time staff of 28, who have

accounting and compliance responsibilities for grants and contracts totaling over $325

million annually.



Over the next several weeks and months, Vanessa will be meeting with various

individuals on campus to learn more about the post award administrative and financial

needs of the UIC community. Please do not hesitate to access her expertise or that of

her senior staff in meeting your grants and contracts needs.





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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 17, 2007 11:14:18 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: New Director of Grants and Contracts-Vanessa Peoples

Reply-To: DDDH Send





Please join me in welcoming Vanessa Peoples as our new Director of Grants and

Contracts. Vanessa comes to us from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota where

she had overall responsibility for post award administrative and financial activities

totaling approximately $300 million as Head of Research Accounting. She

subsequently held two other financial and systems positions at Mayo. As head of

research accounting, she reengineered the Mayo Clinic's effort reporting activities to

come into compliance with federal regulations and implemented numerous policy and

procedural improvements, skills that will be useful to her at UIC. Her prior experience

at G. D Searle Pharmaceutical Company and the University of Chicago Hospitals

should serve us well as we increase the number of grants and contracts in translational

research and clinical trials. Vanessa has a MBA from the University of Chicago and is

a certified public accountant.



As you know, the Grants and Contracts Office has been undergoing a major

reorganization involving the addition of staff and retooling of existing staff. Vanessa's

skills in organizational development, strategic planning and process improvement

should help speed the reorganization along and improve overall service to the

University community. At UIC, Vanessa will oversee a full-time staff of 28, who have

accounting and compliance responsibilities for grants and contracts totaling over $325

million annually.

Over the next several weeks and months, Vanessa will be meeting with various

individuals on campus to learn more about the post award administrative and financial

needs of the UIC community. Please do not hesitate to access her expertise or that of

her senior staff in meeting your grants and contracts needs.





Heather J. Haberaecker

Executive Assistant Vice President for Business

and Finance/Chief Business Officer

University of Illinois at Chicago

809 S. Marshfield, Room 611 (MC078)

Chicago, IL 60612

(312)996-2860 (phone)

(312)996-7287 (fax)

hjh2@uillinois.edu





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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 19, 2007 10:18:24 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Coordinator Of Research Programs Position

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Coordinator Of Research Programs



The Survey Research Laboratory (SRL) of the University of Illinois has an immediate

opening in its Urbana office for a full-time Coordinator of Research Programs who will

be responsible for the oversight of all research and development activities including

organizing and supervising proposal development; supervision of research assistants;

advising clients, faculty, and staff on study design; developing a methodological

program in survey research; and management of complex survey projects. The

Coordinator of Research Programs will administer research projects as they pass from

initial study planning phase to completion to assure that the research projects are

successful. Some travel to SRL‟s Chicago office and to professional meetings is

required.

• Minimum Requirements: MA/MS in Social Science area with at least 2 years

experience of survey research coordination; academic coursework in survey research

methodology strongly preferred.

For full consideration, mail your resume and a detailed cover letter outlining your

qualifications February 23, 2007:

Marguerite Harris

Associate Director

Survey Research Laboratory

412 S. Peoria, 6th Floor

Chicago, Illinois 60607

Please NO phone calls or faxes. The University of Illinois is an Affirmative Action/Equal

Opportunity Employer

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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 24, 2007 1:11:38 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Professional Development Courses for Internationals

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Dear Colleague,



The Tutorium in Intensive English will offer the Advanced Pronunciation and

Communication Skills and the Conversation and Vocabulary Skills Builder courses

beginning next week. These evening courses have proven very useful for scholars,

researchers, and teaching assistants whose language proficiency is limited. Our

experienced staff will help students find the course that meets their needs.



Details and schedules can be found at our website, http://www.uic.edu/depts/tie/ , or call

our campus office at 6-8098. Discounts on course fees are offered for all UIC students

and staff. We will also custom design courses for small groups on campus.



We look forward to working with you!



Madonna Carr

Program Coordinator for Special Courses



To request disability accommodations, please contact Madonna Carr at 312-996-8999.





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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 24, 2007 1:15:12 PM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Update From the Director of SAO

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Colleagues:



In the past 12 months, several significant events have impacted the field of study

abroad nationally in the US, with the potential of long term impact: Senators Dick Durbin

(IL) and Norm Coleman (MN) introduced the Abraham Lincoln Study Abroad Act of

2006 (S.R. 3744), proposing a partnership between the federal government and higher

education to expand participation by U.S. undergraduates in study abroad

programs. Rooted in the vision of Illinois‟ late Senator Paul Simon, the Act proposes

deep and long term funding initiatives to enhance and expand study abroad options for

America 's undergraduate student population, especially for those not traditionally

represented.



The year 2006 was declared by the U.S. Senate as the „Year of Study Abroad'. Also

introduced by Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL), this resolution (S.R. 308) recognizes “the

important role that study abroad plays in shaping American education and global

leadership, and encourages all U.S. citizens, higher education institutions, secondary

schools, businesses, and government programs to promote and expand study abroad

opportunities.”



Third, the Congressionally funded Gilman scholarship which aims to support students

who have been traditionally under-represented in study abroad, including but not limited

to, students with high financial need, had an important change last year. While only

undergraduate students who are receiving federal Pell Grant funding are eligible to

apply for the Gilman, an additional $3,000 Critical Need Language Supplement for a

total possible award of up to $8,000 has been approved by Congress. Critical Need

Languages include: Arabic (all dialects), Chinese (all dialects), Turkic (Azerbaijani,

Kazakh, Kyrgz, Turkish, Turkmen, Uzbek), Persian (Farsi, Dari, Kurdish, Pashto, Tajiki),

Indic (Hindi, Urdu, Nepali, Sinhala, Bengali, Punjabi, Marathi, Gujarati, Sindhi), Korean,

and Russian. With the exception of Persian languages, the Study Abroad program

portfolio includes sites where students can study most of these languages.



The past year also saw a range of program choices added to the Study Abroad Office

program portfolio. Our first offering in summer 2006 of the UIC faculty-led program

based in Rabat and Granada (Al-Andalus: Tracing the Islamic Heritage from Morocco to

Spain) was very successful and will be offered again in summer 2007. We developed

and will be offering this summer a new faculty-led program to Greece (Ancient Greece:

Sacred and Profane). Through academic consortia in which we hold full membership,

there are now additional exciting program offerings for UIC students at sites including:

Stellenbosch, South Africa; Khon Kaen, Thailand; Hanoi, Viet Nam; Suva, Fiji; Amman,

Jordan; Ankara, Turkey; Salvador, Brazil; Brussels, Belgium; Rennes, France; and a

range of exceptional programs in Eastern Europe, including sites in Romania, Hungary,

Slovenia, and the Czech Republic.



In response to the national trend in study abroad, and in higher education generally, to

help create „real world‟ experiences for undergraduates we now have internships for

credit highlighted for those students who want them. These internships are available in

over 30 countries, incorporate an academic component of assessment and evaluation,

and are part of a full term study abroad program.



As our student enrollments for going abroad continue to increase each term, the Study

Abroad Office remains committed to widening participant representation across

academic discipline, gender, race, and ethnicity to more accurately reflect the UIC

undergraduate population. We will also stay focused on the development of the well

rounded, “360 degree” student through the vision that studying content in context with

the right linkages to text-based curricula, can best develop and enhance the critical

literacies students need for success regardless of academic discipline: comprehension

skills of drawing inferences, finding the main idea, making analogies, resolving

contradiction, and distinguishing fact from opinion.



Thank you for partnering with us in this important endeavor.







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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 26, 2007 11:34:14 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Contract Modification Required for University Comptroller Signature

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Date: January 26, 2007



To: Deans, Directors, Department Heads, Academic Fiscal Officers and

Business and Financial

Administrators



From: Heather J. Haberaecker, Executive Assistant Vice President for Business

and Finance



Subject: Contract Modification Required for University Comptroller Signature



Effective February 1, 2007, the signature of the new Vice President and Chief Financial

Officer, Walter K. Knorr, will be placed on all University contracts as Comptroller. Until

then, Stephen K. Rugg‟s signature will continue to be used.



OBFS will update the signature line on all contract templates currently posted on the

OBFS Web site. To prevent delays in processing contracts, please make this same

update to any contract templates currently used in your department before sending

them to the appropriate office(s) for the Comptroller‟s signature. These offices have

delegated authority for affixing the Comptroller‟s signature on selected contracts.



Please refer questions to the appropriate individuals as outlined below:



Sponsored Program Agreements – Luis Vargas at 312-996-2862 or award@uic.edu



Purchasing Contracts – Sue Sturmon at 312-996-2856 or ssturmon@uic.edu

Other Contracts – Sara Siegel at 312-413-9611 or siegel1@uic.edu



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 29, 2007 10:11:29 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Internal Search - Visiting Assistant to the Director

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Midwest AIDS Training and Education Center is seeking to hire a Visiting Assistant to

the Director. Under administrative direction, incumbent will assist in the management

and coordination of fiscal and financial accounting activities of the Center. He/she will

be cross trained in all aspects of the Centers daily business operations. Duties may

include but not limited to administration of sponsored projects; pre and post award.

Also, incumbent will assist in day-to-day Human Resources operations and financial

workflow of the Center. This person will also serve as a liaison with other University,

College, and State offices in these matters.



The incumbent must have a Bachelors degree in Business Administration, Finance,

Accounting, or other related discipline. Minimum of two years professional level

experience in the University of Illinois administration or equivalent experience in a

similarly complex organization. Personal qualifications include ability to work well with

a wide-range of professionals, ability to meet deadlines and commitment to work.

Ability to manage multiple projects. Ability to work independently and in a small team.

Strong detail orientation. Excellent computer skills especially in MS Excel and Access.

For fullest consideration, send resumes by February 28th, 2007 to Barbara Mucha,

Midwest AIDS Training and Education Center (MATEC), m/c 779, 1640 W. Roosevelt

Rd., Suite 511, Chicago, IL 60608. Fax: 312-413-4184. UIC is an AA/EOE.



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 29, 2007 10:17:11 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: New Associate Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs Announced

Reply-To: DDDH Send



It is with great pleasure and honor that the Office of Faculty Affairs announces the

appointment of Dr. Robert Paul Malchow as Associate Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs,

effective January 22, 2007. Dr. Malchow is an Associate Professor of Biological

Sciences and currently serves as Program Director in the Division of Integrative

Organismal Biology at the National Science Foundation. Dr. Malchow will be spending

20% time as Associate Vice Provost until August 2007, when he will join us for a 50%

appointment.

Dr. Malchow will be responsible for developing and implementing University-wide

programs of teaching and learning with a focus on faculty development. This new

position will include overseeing a number of teaching-related programs that operate out

of the Office of Faculty Affairs, among them the Teaching and Learning Center, the

College Teaching Preparatory Program, the International TA Program, and the Students

for the Improvement of Teaching (SITS) program. He will also work closely with the

Council for Excellence in Teaching and Learning (CETL) and help to strengthen current

faculty development programs such as mentoring, orientation for new faculty and

administrators, and Opportunities for Civic Engagement.



Dr. Malchow has been at UIC since 1986 and is a highly regarded teacher and

researcher. He has served as the Department of Biological Science's Director of

Undergraduate Studies and Chair of the Educational Policy Committee, as well as

chaired the Educational Policy Committee in the Honors College from 2003 to 2005.

He is a three-time finalist for the Silver Circle Teaching Award and received a student

award for Best Instructor in the Biological Sciences in 2004 and 2005. In 2005 he was

named UIC Honors Fellow of the Year as well as Outstanding Faculty Supporter of

Undergraduate Research, an award given by the Chicago Area Undergraduate

Research Symposium.



Within his department, Dr. Malchow has tried to find ways to reshape and add to the

educational experience that undergraduates receive, emphasizing, for example,

individually designed Independent Study and Research courses. He has been a

mentor in the Biology Colloquium, a student-organized one-credit course that includes

lectures by invited faculty and researchers and tours of biology-related laboratories,

hospitals, and industrial facilities. As a Faculty Fellow in the Honors College, he

developed a new 200-level seminar, "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine," and

has worked on initiating a Capstone experience for all Honors College undergraduates.

For five years, Dr. Malchow also served as a mentor in the Research Experience for

Undergraduates program at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole,

Massachusetts, and at UIC's Laboratory of Integrative Neuroscience.



Dr. Malchow received his Ph.D. in Neurobiology and Behavior from SUNY Stony Brook

in 1983. His research focuses on the cellular and molecular mechanisms used within

the retina to process visual information. In addition to providing important basic

information about the biological processes underlying our sense of sight, the studies are

designed to provide insight more generally into the processing of neural information

throughout the nervous system. He has been the recipient of awards from the National

Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, the Whittaker Foundation, the

Marine Biological Laboratory, and the Grass Foundation.



We are excited about Dr. Malchow joining our team in Faculty Affairs and look forward

to his invaluable contributions in helping us improve our services to the betterment of

the teaching, scholarship and service enterprises of our faculty.



Mrinalini C. Rao, Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs

Mrinalini C. Rao, Ph.D.

Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs

Professor, Department of Physiology and Biophysics

University of Illinois at Chicago

Office of the Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs (M/C 103)

Room 2715 University Hall

601 South Morgan Street

Chicago, Illinois 60607

Ph. (312)413-3470; Fax (312)996-1700

http://www.uic.edu/depts/oaa/rao.html

http://www.uic.edu/depts/mcpb/pages/rao/rao.htm



Assistant: Laura Stempel,

For appointments, please contact Kristy Kambanis at



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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 31, 2007 9:04:10 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: eTeaching symposium

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Subject Line: UIC‟s eTeaching Symposium – “Digital Age of Library Resources”

Reply to: exedworkshops@uic.edu



At the core of a major university is its library. How do we share this vital resource with

our students when teaching technology-enhanced, online or blended courses? How do

we capitalize on the vast research and instructional resources available via the

internet? Our libraries and librarians have been in the forefront of adaptation and

transformation in responding to the use of technology to teach and learn. Join

colleagues this month to explore the capabilities and opportunities of digital libraries –

specifically, enhanced services, processes, structures and social practices.

The eTeaching Symposium is grateful to Senior Library Specialist, Pia M. Hunter for

presenting the “Digital Age of Library Resources”. Ms. Hunter will provide an overview

of reserve services and electronic resources available to faculty and students through

the UIC Library. Highlighted topics will include:

-- The Docutek Electronic Reserve System (ERes)

-- Using Electronic Reserves with Blackboard

-- Linking to Materials in the UIC Online Collections

-- EBrary Electronic Book Collection

-- RefWorks

-- Copyright Resources

The symposium will also include demonstrations of a variety of electronic resources and

services available through the University Library. Please share this information with

your faculty and staff.

WHEN:

February 21, 2007 | 11 – 1p.m. (brown bag lunch)



WHERE:

Student Center East, Room 713

750 S. Halsted St, Chicago, IL 60607



PRESENTER:

Pia M. Hunter led the Library task force charged to implement electronic course

reserves and make required readings available online and more easily accessible to all

UIC students. Starting with one course in 2001, electronic reserves (ERes) are now

used in over 350 courses by nearly 250 instructors. She has successfully led the

development, implementation and improvement of reserve services to UIC faculty and

students. She provides electronic reserve instruction and support for students and

academic departments university-wide.



REGISTRATION INFORMATION

There is no cost to attend this symposium, but registration is requested. Please register

by February 16, 2007.



Register now at: www.externaledu.uic.edu/eteaching/symposium0207.html



For further details regarding this event, please contact External Education at (312)

355-0423 or by e-mail at exedworkshops@uic.edu.



We look forward to seeing you!





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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 31, 2007 9:08:18 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Black History Month 2007 - Concerts, Shows & Balls

Reply-To: DDDH Send



Black History Month 2007

2/1/07 – 2/28/07

*Get your copy of the Black History Month Brochure in the UIC Student Centers for

complete listings of events*



STAR STUDDED EVENTS!!!

All tickets sold at the Box Offices:

Student Center East - 750 S. Halsted, Service Center, 2nd Floor

Student Center West - 828 S. Wolcott, Information Center, 1st Floor

Monday-Friday 8:30am - 4:30pm Accepts: Cash, MasterCard & Visa



Ask about the "Underground Railroad" discount.



Friday 2/9

Delta Sigma Theta - Divine Times Showcase

Illinois Room - Student Center East

7:00 pm

For pricing and tickets contact Campus Programs at 312.413.5070



Friday 2/10

9th Annual Heritage Ball

Illinois Room - Student Center East

7:00 pm

$10.00 in advance, $15.00 at door



Performances by Yaw

FIND OUT WHO WILL BE CROWNED HERITAGE BALL KING & QUEEN



Friday 2/16

Phi Beta Sigma - "The Chocolate Affair" Steppers Set

Rathskellar - Student Center East

7:00 pm

$5.00 at door



Saturday 2/17

Black Greek Council - Step Show

Illinois Room - Student Center East

7:00 pm

$10.00 in advance, $15.00 at door



Friday 2/23

17th Annual Blues Cabaret

Illinois Room - Student Center East

7:00 pm

$20.00 (public), $15.00 (UIC staff), $10.00 (UIC students)

Price of admission includes Soul Food Buffet



Performance by Lurrie Bell



Saturday 2/24

Live & Unplugged Concert

Featuring:

Virgin Records Recording Artist

Mikkey

&

1st & 15th Recording Artists

Risque

Illinois Room - Student Center East

7:00 pm

$10.00 in advance, $15 at door



Also Featuring:

UIC Gospel Choir, Yaw

Stic & Move and Flawless Dancers



Contact Campus Programs at 312.413.5070 or check out the site for more info:

http://www2.uic.edu/stud_orgs/prof/bhm





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From: DDDH Send

Date: January 31, 2007 11:03:57 AM CST

To: DDDH@LISTSERV.UIC.EDU

Subject: Nominations for Student Leadership and Service Awards

Reply-To: DDDH Send



CSSA DDDH Letter 2007.doc ¨CSSA 2007 Nomination Form.pdf ¨


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