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NEXT ISSUE OF LEHIGHWEEK WILL BE PUBLISHED APRIL 9. HAVE A HAPPY, HEALTHY PASSOVER AND EASTER! This Week's Spotlight, Lehigh education, events and people make it all worthwhile for Keith Sneddon. ■"■r- Including Ihe bouth Mountaineer -w- —w' LehighWeek Vol. 4, Issue 22 Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania March 19, 1991 This Week At A Glance SPORTS Lehigh fans named NUMBER ONE in Patriot League Men's Lacrosse starts strong See South Mountaineer COMMUNITY Spring Cleaning x Students from four colleges will clean up local parks and creeks on Saturday, April 6. See story on page 4. CAMPUS Nature's Gift to Lehigh Henry Drinker's trees still grace today's campus. See story on page5 IT'S ACADEMIC Modern Foreign Languages ; Computer Science and Electrical Engineering featured. See stories on pages 6,7 and 13. o C/) E u i—i w o c XL o c: 13 O CD GETTING A JUMP ON JOBS 412 employers conducted 5,802 interviews with undergraduates on campus during 1989-90. Source: Career services CAMPUS COMMITMENT TO COMMUNITY Lehigh students raised $3,500 during last week's Benefit for the Homeless. Center City Ministry representatives (above lfrom left) Hannah Skidmore and Judith Reynolds accept the check from students Amy Llewellyn, Jennifer Whitney and Peggy McKenna. The Bethlehem Police (above) avenged last year's loss to Campus Police by beating them Friday 120-104. The annual charity game raised $1600 for Special Olympics. Sharon Unger (right) of Special Olympics accepts the check from Bethlehem's Scott Parry and Lehigh's Tony Casciano. Lehigh's Sgt. Bob Bruneio and Bethlehem's Dectective D.A. Woodman fight for a loose ball. Steffen officially joins Lehigh: Chaplain Installed "This is the right time for Lloyd Steffen at Lehigh," President Peter Likins told those attending ceremonies marking the formal installation of Lehigh's new University chaplain Sunday afternoon in Packer Memorial Church.. "He has the energy and wisdom and sensitivity to be a gentle activist as a chaplain," Likins said. Steffen was installed by the Rev. Don Overlock, conference minister for the Penn Northeast Conference of the United Church of Christ, assisted by the Rev. Emmajane Finney, Steffen's wife. In his response to the installation, Steffen noted that his wife described the installation as "the day I've been formally committed to an institution." The service was not for him personally, he explained, but it recognized what the chaplaincy means to the university. "The community of knowledge and the community of faith have come together and recognized their common project," he said. ■ "Both seek for truth and understanding," he added. "Both seek to dispel ignorance and liberate the human heart and mind. Both seek to instill values that will promote cooperation and peacefulness among people, thereby promoting a more humane and compassionate world." Steffen dedicated himself "to serve the religious needs of this community" and "to be among you as a teacher, a minister of the church, and a scholar of the university." The keynote speaker, William Hamilton, university professor emeritus at Portland State University, spoke on the meaning of Christianity in a sermon entitled "Is There Anything Left To Be Said?" "Christianity," according to Hamilton, "is simply a way of being in this world, and not the next, with others. Without neighbors, there is no Christianity." Marsha Duncan, vice-president for student affairs, welcomed the congregation. The call to worship was given by the Rev. John Mraz, the university's Catholic chaplain. MARIE C. BOLTZ UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES RM«306 LINDERMAN LIBRARY FIRST-CLASS MAIL U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 230 Bethlehem, Pa. 18015 NO.030
Object Description
Title | LehighWeek Volume 04, Issue 22 |
Subject | Lehigh University--Periodicals |
Description | Reports on the past week's news, and schedules of upcoming events, at Lehigh University. Thirty issues yearly, published weekly, except for vacations, during the school year, and once or twice a month during the summer. |
Creator | Lehigh University. Dept. of University Relations. |
Publisher | Lehigh University |
Date | 1991-03-19 |
Type | Text |
Format | newsletters |
File Format | image/tiff |
Extent | 16 pages |
Dimensions | 38 cm. x 28 cm. |
Identifier | SC LSer L522 V4 N22 |
Language | Eng |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Catalog Record | https://asa.lib.lehigh.edu/Record/304229 |
Description
Title | [Front cover] |
Identifier | SC LSer L522 V4 N22 001 |
Language | Eng |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ |
Catalog Record | https://asa.lib.lehigh.edu/Record/304229 |
Full Text | NEXT ISSUE OF LEHIGHWEEK WILL BE PUBLISHED APRIL 9. HAVE A HAPPY, HEALTHY PASSOVER AND EASTER! This Week's Spotlight, Lehigh education, events and people make it all worthwhile for Keith Sneddon. ■"■r- Including Ihe bouth Mountaineer -w- —w' LehighWeek Vol. 4, Issue 22 Lehigh University, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania March 19, 1991 This Week At A Glance SPORTS Lehigh fans named NUMBER ONE in Patriot League Men's Lacrosse starts strong See South Mountaineer COMMUNITY Spring Cleaning x Students from four colleges will clean up local parks and creeks on Saturday, April 6. See story on page 4. CAMPUS Nature's Gift to Lehigh Henry Drinker's trees still grace today's campus. See story on page5 IT'S ACADEMIC Modern Foreign Languages ; Computer Science and Electrical Engineering featured. See stories on pages 6,7 and 13. o C/) E u i—i w o c XL o c: 13 O CD GETTING A JUMP ON JOBS 412 employers conducted 5,802 interviews with undergraduates on campus during 1989-90. Source: Career services CAMPUS COMMITMENT TO COMMUNITY Lehigh students raised $3,500 during last week's Benefit for the Homeless. Center City Ministry representatives (above lfrom left) Hannah Skidmore and Judith Reynolds accept the check from students Amy Llewellyn, Jennifer Whitney and Peggy McKenna. The Bethlehem Police (above) avenged last year's loss to Campus Police by beating them Friday 120-104. The annual charity game raised $1600 for Special Olympics. Sharon Unger (right) of Special Olympics accepts the check from Bethlehem's Scott Parry and Lehigh's Tony Casciano. Lehigh's Sgt. Bob Bruneio and Bethlehem's Dectective D.A. Woodman fight for a loose ball. Steffen officially joins Lehigh: Chaplain Installed "This is the right time for Lloyd Steffen at Lehigh," President Peter Likins told those attending ceremonies marking the formal installation of Lehigh's new University chaplain Sunday afternoon in Packer Memorial Church.. "He has the energy and wisdom and sensitivity to be a gentle activist as a chaplain," Likins said. Steffen was installed by the Rev. Don Overlock, conference minister for the Penn Northeast Conference of the United Church of Christ, assisted by the Rev. Emmajane Finney, Steffen's wife. In his response to the installation, Steffen noted that his wife described the installation as "the day I've been formally committed to an institution." The service was not for him personally, he explained, but it recognized what the chaplaincy means to the university. "The community of knowledge and the community of faith have come together and recognized their common project," he said. ■ "Both seek for truth and understanding," he added. "Both seek to dispel ignorance and liberate the human heart and mind. Both seek to instill values that will promote cooperation and peacefulness among people, thereby promoting a more humane and compassionate world." Steffen dedicated himself "to serve the religious needs of this community" and "to be among you as a teacher, a minister of the church, and a scholar of the university." The keynote speaker, William Hamilton, university professor emeritus at Portland State University, spoke on the meaning of Christianity in a sermon entitled "Is There Anything Left To Be Said?" "Christianity," according to Hamilton, "is simply a way of being in this world, and not the next, with others. Without neighbors, there is no Christianity." Marsha Duncan, vice-president for student affairs, welcomed the congregation. The call to worship was given by the Rev. John Mraz, the university's Catholic chaplain. MARIE C. BOLTZ UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES RM«306 LINDERMAN LIBRARY FIRST-CLASS MAIL U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 230 Bethlehem, Pa. 18015 NO.030 |
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