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Announcements

The Coalition for Diversity at Boalt Hall is holding it’s annual Law
School Admissions Workshop for People of Color and Other Underrepresented
Groups on Saturday, September 15th, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

Anthony Solana, author of “A Guide to the Law School Application Process
For People of Color,” will provide tips on how to complete a successful
law school application.

Students in attendance will have access to Boalt Hall students and staff
from the Admissions and Financial Aid offices. Panels and workshops will
cover all aspects of a successful application, from the LSAT to personal
statements and resumes.

In addition to FREE FOOD, students in attendance will become eligible for
a FREE LSAT COURSE, valued at over $1000!

This will be a great event, so be sure to RSVP at
coalitionfordiversity@gmail.com by Wednesday, September 5th in order to
attend.

Also, find us on Facebook:
http://berkeley.facebook.com/event.php?eid=4818677986

See you there!

Jose Luis Lopez
Boalt Hall, Class of 2009
joselopez@berkeley.edu

 

 

  Help a Chicana/Latina alumna out!

 
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A message from Silvia Marquez silenitam@hotmail.com.

Dear Friends and Family,

I recently accepted the challenge to raise funds to support the San Francisco Komen Race for the Cure on September 23, 2007 in the fight against breast cancer. One in eight women will be stricken with breast cancer in her lifetime and the more we raise, the more the San Francisco Affiliate of Susan G. Komen for the Cure can give back to fund vital breast cancer education, screening and treatment programs in our own community and support the national search for a cure.

***Please visit my page on the Race for the Cure site. I have a very personal reason for participating in this fundraiser this year and you will find more information on my page.

Please join me in the fight by pledging in support of my participation in the Race or contributing generously to Komen San Francisco. Your tax-deductible contribution will fund innovative outreach and awareness programs for medically underserved communities in the Bay Area and national breast cancer research. It is faster and easier than ever to support this great cause - you can make a donation online by simply clicking on the link at the bottom of this message. If you would prefer, you can also send your tax-deductible contribution to the address listed below. Whatever you can give will help! I truly appreciate your support and will keep you posted on my progress.

Thank you so much for your time and support in the fight against breast cancer! Every step counts!

150 Post Street, Suite 755, San Francisco, CA 94108


Click here to visit my personal page.
If the text above does not appear as a clickable link, you can visit the web address:
http://race.sfkomen.org/site/TR/Race/General?px=1070001&pg=personal&fr_id=1010&et=Ymbfs54hxoPrlIMhDzG6pA..&s_tafId=2862

Click here to view the team page for I *heart* Margarita!
If the text above does not appear as a clickable link, you can visit the web address:
http://race.sfkomen.org/site/TR/Race/General?team_id=4160&pg=team&fr_id=1010&et=7bkeGHboqf-r66QIG68kJg..&s_tafId=2862



 

Congratulations to Chicano/Latino Alumni Association member, Lupe Gallegos-Diaz, for her recent Chancellor's Public Service Award!!

Activism, service, and engagement recognized at first annual Chancellor's Public Service Awards ceremony
Campus-community members involved in service and public partnerships are honored at event

06 June 2007

The first annual Chancellor's Public Service Awards were presented at a University House ceremony on May 14. The awards, as the chancellor noted in a message to attendees, "recognize the commitment of faculty, staff, and students … whose individual or combined efforts enhance the quality of life of our community, whether here in the Bay Area or around the globe."

Eight individuals and three programs were selected for the 2006-07 awards:

The Research in the Public Interest Award went to Robert Bea, professor of civil and environmental engineering, for his investigation into the failure of New Orleans' levees during Hurricane Katrina.

: Staff honoree Lupe Gallegos-Diaz greets Patricia Cross, emerita professor of education.
 

The Individual Civic Engagement Award — Staff went to Lupe Gallegos-Diaz of the Office of Multicultural Student Development. In addition to pursuing a Ph.D. in ethnic studies at Berkeley, she is active in many community activities, serving as treasurer of the Bay Area Hispano Institute for Advancement, as a board member of the Voter Registration and Education Project, and in various roles with the Greenlining Institute.

The Individual Civic Engagement Award — Faculty went to Glynda Hull, professor of education, for her role in establishing Digital Underground Storytelling for Youth (DUSTY), an afterschool program that teaches multimedia skills to low-income youth.

There were two honorees in the Individual Civic Engagement Award — Student category. Susan Amrose, a grad student in physics, was honored for her research and volunteer activities in such environments as Darfur (where she helped disseminate fuel-efficient cookstoves for refugees), San Quentin (where she has taught math, astronomy, and physics to inmates), and Bangladesh (where her doctoral research focuses on removing arsenic from drinking water). Gideon Sofer, an undeclared sophomore, was honored for his efforts to raise public awareness about Crohn's Disease, from which he suffers.

Robert Apodoca, a Cal alum and community activist, standing with Berkeley Mayor Tom Bates.
 

Two individuals also shared the spotlight when the Faculty Service-Learning Leadership Awards were presented. Fred Collignon, professor of city and regional planning, was honored for his leadership in promoting service learning at Berkeley since 1994 — a period during which service-learning course offerings have expanded from 20 to more than 100. Ashok Gadgil, professor in the Energy and Resources Group, was recognized for the service projects that arose out of his Design for Sustainable Communities course, first offered in spring 2006.

The University-Community Partnership Award went to the Center for Community Innovation and the Richmond Equitable Development Initiative, two entities that have collaborated with Berkeley faculty, staff, and students to improve the quality of life in Richmond by such means as increasing access to affordable housing, expanding workforce and economic development, and positioning the city as a model city for green-building practices.

The Mather Good Citizen Award and the Individual Student Civic Engagement Award were presented to Amit Singh Gill, an undergrad majoring in political science. The former award has been presented since 1983 to a graduating senior who exemplifies qualities of leadership, service, and good citizenship; the latter award recognizes Gill's ongoing service to the Suitcase Clinic, which offers multiple services to the city of Berkeley's homeless and low-income populations. The clinic itself was recognized at the ceremony with the Student Group Public Service Award and Community Impact Award.

The Community Impact Award was also presented to AileyCamp, which since 1989 has combined dance instruction with personal-development and communication classes for youth; the first and only West Coast AileyCamp has been a fixture on the Berkeley campus since 2002, serving more than 360 middle-school students to date.

 

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Go Bears!!