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Show Volume XIV Issue XV The Ogden Valley news Page 7 October 15, 2007 Announcements Obituaries LUND cont. from page 6 October 8 at the Mt. Ogden Ward Chapel, 1314 27th St, Ogden, with Bishop Ron Tribe officiating. Interment, Memorial Gardens of the Wasatch. E-mail condolences to the family at <larkin@csolutions.net> Fr. Bartholomew Gottemoller Fr. Bartholomew Gottemoller, O.C.S.O., monk and priest of the Abbey of Our Lady of the Holy Trinity, died Sunday, October 7 at the Monastery after an extended illness. Father Bartholomew was born in Indianapolis, Indiana on November 16, 1914. He entered Gethsemani Abbey in Kentucky in 1934, and was ordained to the Catholic Priesthood in 1942. He was given the duty of infirmarian. In July of 1947, he became one of the founders of the new Monastery in Utah. In addition to his former responsibilities, Fr. Bartholomew was made Novice Director for many years. Fr. Bartholomew was a published author, and his spirituality has been a source of education and consolation for many. Internment in the Abbey Cemetery preceded by a Mass of Christian burial October 11. Funeral arrangements by Myers Mortuary of Ogden. Deceased Brent H. Frost, 68, died September 2007. Helen Louise Steele Hancock, 82, died October 2, 2007. Family Art Activity Day—Free for the Community The Eccles Community Art Center received funds from a Weber County RAMP grant to establish a family art activity day each month. Named Second Saturday Arts, this project will consist of free visual and performing art activities for parents to experience with their children who are ages 4 to 12 years old. Instruction and activities will begin at 10:00 a.m. and continue through noon on the second Saturday of the month. In October, The Eccles Community Art Center will partner with the volunteer actors and staff of the Gallery Theater. They will be providing two workshops, one at 10:00 a.m. and another at 11:00 a.m. Volunteer actors will open the work- shop with the first scene from “The House Where the Fairies Danced,” in which the children, Becky, dressed as a witch and played by Clarity Perry of North Ogden; and Josh, a vampire, acted by Skylar Pro of Washington Terrace approach the house of Celie, played by Margaret Vaughn, of Riverdale to “trick or treat.” Then the actors will return at Josh’s insistence for more candy—and this time to improvise with the children and parents from the audience. Nell Heller of Ogden will assist the audience participants in ways that will allow them to expres themselves, providing a great opportunity to explore acting. Children will also be able to create and embellish a paper mask in the center‘s art studio. Masks, markers, paper, scissors, and a variety of embellishments will be available for children to use. Eccles Community Art Center staff and volunteers will be on hand to assist. Space is limited and projects are based on a first come first served basis. The Main Gallery will be open for children and parents wishing to enjoy the exhibit. Children may ask gallery assistants for the clues to a scavenger hunt to find motifs and subjects in the art, or for a copy of brochure outlining the center’s selfguided tour. For more information about the Eccles Community Art Center or Second Saturday Arts, please review the center’s web site at www.ogden4arts.org or call 801-392-6935. Faculty Forum to Feature Botany Professor’s “Last Lecture” Do scientific biases sell plants short? Do these biases give rise to misunderstandings about how nature works? Botany professor and department chair Eugene Bozniak will attempt to set the record straight when he presents “Biological Truths, Falsehoods and Consequences” as WSU’s fourth annual Last Lecture, October 23 at 1:00 p.m. in Wattis Business Building Smith Lecture Hall. Bozniak will use a discussion of biological world record holders as a springboard to discuss scientific biases. His presentation will draw on themes and concepts that he has been sharing with students in his botany courses for nearly four decades. The Last Lecture Series showcases and honors the work of outstanding WSU professors. Each year WSU*s Teaching & Learning Forum accepts nominations for professors that inspire, entertain or challenge their students. One professor is chosen and honored with the distinction of giving the lecture of a lifetimethe lecture he would give if he could never lecture again. Bozniak’s lecture will kick off the fourth annual Faculty Forum at WSU, an event that offers faculty the opportunity to share their research and scholarship with students, colleagues and the public. This year’s forum features 24 presentations on a wide variety of topics by more than 30 faculty representing disciplines from across campus. “It’s wonderful for our students to see faculty as active researchers, bringing discoveries and new-found knowledge into the classroom,” said associate professor of teacher education Fran Butler, chair of the Teaching, Learning & Assessment (TLA) Committee. The forum is organized by the TLA and Faculty Senate Research, Scholarship & Professional Growth committees to recognize faculty scholarship on campus. “We want the community to come and take part in this event,” said Butler. “There is a lot of great research being done by our faculty that all too often goes unnoticed.” Both the lecture and forum are free to the public. The forum, featuring oral and poster presentations, will run from 2:00 to 4:30 p.m. in the Wattis Business Building. Oral presentations will be held simultaneously at 2:00 p.m., 2:45 p.m., and 3:30 p.m. in rooms 114 to 122 of the Wattis Business Building. A final faculty presentation will be given when Tom Priest performs a bassoon recital at 7:30 p.m. in the Val A. Browning Center for the Performing Arts Allred Theater. Bozniak joined the faculty at WSU in 1969. His professional mission has been to give plants the recognition they deserve, while addressing the consequences of ignoring the role plants play in nature. Visit weber.edu/wsutoday for more news about Weber State University. FOR ALL YOUR HAULING NEEDS: Gravel, Road Base, Sand, Etc. Thinking about a career in Real Estate? Exit Realty Wasatch is now hiring new and experienced agents. Come see what we have to offer! 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